Earth looks blue from space because of the way sunlight interacts with our atmosphere. The Earth's atmosphere scatters sunlight in all directions, but blue light is scattered more than other colors because it has a shorter wavelength. This scattering of blue light gives the Earth a blue appearance when viewed from space.
From a distance, the Earth appears as a blue and white sphere with swirling clouds and patches of land and water. It is a beautiful and fragile planet floating in the vastness of space.
The sky appears blue because of a phenomenon called Rayleigh scattering, where sunlight is scattered by the gases and particles in the Earth's atmosphere. To explain this to kids, you can say that when sunlight reaches the Earth, the blue light scatters more than other colors because it travels in shorter, smaller waves. This makes the sky look blue to us.
The sky looks blue because of a phenomenon called Rayleigh scattering, where sunlight is scattered by the gases and particles in the Earth's atmosphere. Blue light has a shorter wavelength and scatters more easily than other colors, making the sky appear blue to our eyes.
The sky looks blue because sunlight is scattered by the Earth's atmosphere.
The International Space Station orbits Earth at an average altitude of about 420 kilometers, or roughly 260 miles above the surface.
The blueness you see on the Earth from space is the oceanic water.
Because it wants to!
It's the water, and the green is land.
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
The Earth appears blue from outer space because of the reflection and scattering of sunlight off the oceans and atmosphere. The oceans absorb longer wavelengths of light while reflecting shorter blue wavelengths, and the atmosphere scatters blue light from the sun, resulting in the overall blue appearance.
Earth appears blue from space because of its oceans, which cover about 71% of its surface. This vast amount of water reflects and scatters sunlight, giving the planet its characteristic blue appearance. Additionally, the Earth's atmosphere also scatters sunlight, which further contributes to the blue hue when viewed from space.
We are on the Earth's surface. To be in the Earth we would have to be underground. Although it doesn't look as if we are in space, the very thin blue sphere around Earth is our atmosphere. To enter space we would go through that atmosphere. :D
The water appears blue because it is reflecting the sunlit atmosphere from the relative perspective of the surface of the Earth. (There are other reasons too.)
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).
Earth is a deformed sphere. it has large dents all around it. from space you would see white, green, and mostly blue.
The water appears blue because it is reflecting the sunlit atmosphere from the relative perspective of the surface of the Earth. (There are other reasons too.)
Well to begin with, the blue you see in pictures from outer space are the oceans. The sky really isn't blue; it is the reflection of a certain wavelength of light (Blue) off of the particles in the air. So the atmosphere is essentally clear.