Blue light is most scattered by oxygen and nitrogen molecules in the Earth's atmosphere. This is why the sky appears blue during the day.
Sir Isaac Newton is credited with discovering that the color of the sky is blue. He demonstrated that white light is made up of various colors, and that the blue color of the sky is the result of the scattering of sunlight by the Earth's atmosphere.
the sky is part of our atmosphere which is in earth so it comes from earth
Well someone says it's been blue before and trun pinkish so all we no right know is that we seen the sky in mars pinkish and blue but we might see other colors TOO The sky on mars is a pinkish-red color.
a same sky but a deep blue
The true color of the sky is blue, due to the way Earth's atmosphere scatters sunlight.
The color of the sky appears blue due to the way Earth's atmosphere scatters sunlight. It is not the actual color of the sky, but rather an optical illusion caused by the scattering of light.
the color changes.
The color of the sky on earth would still appear blue but the "sky" around you would be black
Neptune's sky appears blue in color, similar to Earth's sky. This blue hue is due to the scattering of sunlight by the methane gas in the planet's atmosphere.
No, the sky is not actually purple. The color of the sky is typically blue due to the way sunlight interacts with Earth's atmosphere.
The color of the sky can vary depending on where you are, the time of day, and atmospheric conditions. Generally, on a clear day, the sky appears blue due to the scattering of sunlight by the gases and particles in the Earth's atmosphere.
The answer is that the Moon has no atmosphere. So, sunlight is not "scattered" as it is by the Earth's atmosphere. The Earth's atmosphere scatters blue light more than other colors causing our sky to be blue. So, the Moon has a black sky during its daytime and the Earth has a blue sky. You can see the black sky in photographs taken during the Apollo Moon landings. There's another answer below, but it's about the Earth's sky. When asked the color of the Earth's night sky, it is tempting to say, "black, of course"! However, that is not really correct. It looks black to us because there is not enough light to stimulate the color-sensitive cones in our eyes, even though there is light in the nighttime sky, and it has color. Away from city lights or other interfering light sources, the night sky, illuminated by moonlight is blue, similar to the sunlit daytime sky. At night we see through the atmosphere and out into space.
The sun's position in the sky affects the color of the sky. During sunrise and sunset, the sun is lower in the sky, and its light has to travel through more of Earth's atmosphere. This scatters shorter wavelengths of light, like blues and greens, leaving longer wavelengths, such as reds and oranges, to dominate the sky's color.
The lunar sky appears black, similar to the night sky on Earth, due to the lack of atmosphere on the moon. This means there is no scattering of sunlight to create the blue hue we see during the day on Earth.
Blue light is most scattered by oxygen and nitrogen molecules in the Earth's atmosphere. This is why the sky appears blue during the day.
The color of the sky during the day is typically blue due to the scattering of sunlight by the Earth's atmosphere. The molecules in the atmosphere scatter shorter wavelengths of light, such as blue and violet, more efficiently than longer wavelengths, giving the sky its blue appearance.