Clouds.
White swirls on Earth could refer to a variety of natural phenomena, such as clouds, snow-covered mountains, or swirling ocean currents. Additionally, man-made structures like wind farms or crop circles may also appear as white swirls from above.
The Earth appears predominantly blue from space due to the presence of water on its surface. However, when viewed from the ground, Earth's colors range from blue (oceans) and green (land) to brown and white (deserts and polar regions).
The moon.
That varies from almost zero (black surfaces) to all of it (white & shiny surfaces).
Images from space of Earth have been taken by NASA. When dark, Earth tends to be lit up. Natural and artificial gasses on Earth make it lit up at night. It can often seem like the stars, which we see in the sky at night are on Earth instead.
Hurricanes, or clouds
White swirls on Earth could refer to a variety of natural phenomena, such as clouds, snow-covered mountains, or swirling ocean currents. Additionally, man-made structures like wind farms or crop circles may also appear as white swirls from above.
A bluish marble looks exactly like the Earth, with some swirls of color white scattered along the surface.
it is called white space and should be 20-30% in a page
The planet Earth as seen from outer space is a blue and white ball.
The Earth appears predominantly blue from space due to the presence of water on its surface. However, when viewed from the ground, Earth's colors range from blue (oceans) and green (land) to brown and white (deserts and polar regions).
The moon.
Jupiter is the planet that has white ammonia clouds.
well i think they would mostly be space junk check this out its the earth http://static.howstuffworks.com/gif/space-junk-4.jpg and all that white stuff is space junk orbiting earth.
Leaving out the clouds, the main color is blue because of the oceans. You'd expect the continents to be green because of all the plants, but if you look at pictures, they're often mostly tan. Overall: blue and tan with lots of overlaid white swirls.
maybe...if they made copies
In space, the Earth looks like a blue marble. NASA has many photographs of the Earth from space. The earth is spherical like an orange but it is not orange.http://eol.jsc.nasa.gov/Collections/EarthFromSpace/land.htmhttp://www.wired.com/2014/12/digital-globe-best-earth-from-space-201