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2006-09-10 19:05:36 · 18 answers · asked by Halidou 1 in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

18 answers

It was Einstein who answered this question. It has to do with the way sunlight is scattered by the molecules in the atmosphere. Blue light scatters more than red (Tyndall effect also known as Rayleigh scattering), so more blue light reaches our eye.

There is an excellent description at the website listed below (look at the cartoon and it will be pretty clear).

It is not a reflection from the ocean. And it isn't just water molecules that cause the effect.

Aloha

2006-09-12 05:51:41 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

The sky is like a light filter.

When the light from the sun passes through our atmosphere, it filters out the color blue and allows all the other colors in light to pass through.

We see the color blue because that's the color wavelength that's being "held" in the sky (because it's the filtered color).

By the way - it's not reflecting the ocean. Where do people get this answer??

2006-09-11 02:12:46 · answer #2 · answered by umwut? 6 · 0 0

The sky is blue partly because air scatters short-wavelength light in preference to longer wavelengths. Combined, these effects scatter (bend away in all directions) some short, blue light waves while allowing almost all longer, red light waves to pass straight through. When we look toward a part of the sky not near the sun, the blue color we see is blue light waves scattered down toward us from the white sunlight passing through the air overhead. Near sunrise and sunset, most of the light we see comes in nearly tangent to the Earth's surface, so that the light's path through the atmosphere is so long that much of the blue and even yellow light is scattered out, leaving the sun rays and the clouds it illuminates red.

Scattering and absorption are major causes of the attenuation of radiation by the atmosphere. Scattering varies as a function of the ratio of the particle diameter to the wavelength of the radiation. When this ratio is less than about one-tenth, Rayleigh scattering occurs in which the scattering coefficient varies inversely as the fourth power of the wavelength. At larger values of the ratio of particle diameter to wavelength, the scattering varies in a complex fashion described, for spherical particles, by the Mie theory; at a ratio of the order of 10, the laws of geometric optics begin to apply.

2006-09-11 02:14:06 · answer #3 · answered by pinacoladasundae 3 · 0 0

The sky is blue partly because air scatters short-wavelength light in preference to longer wavelengths. Combined, these effects scatter (bend away in all directions) some short, blue light waves while allowing almost all longer, red light waves to pass straight through. When we look toward a part of the sky not near the sun, the blue color we see is blue light waves scattered down toward us from the white sunlight passing through the air overhead. Near sunrise and sunset, most of the light we see comes in nearly tangent to the Earth's surface, so that the light's path through the atmosphere is so long that much of the blue and even yellow light is scattered out, leaving the sun rays and the clouds it illuminates red.

Scattering and absorption are major causes of the attenuation of radiation by the atmosphere. Scattering varies as a function of the ratio of the particle diameter to the wavelength of the radiation. When this ratio is less than about one-tenth, Rayleigh scattering occurs in which the scattering coefficient varies inversely as the fourth power of the wavelength. At larger values of the ratio of particle diameter to wavelength, the scattering varies in a complex fashion described, for spherical particles, by the Mie theory; at a ratio of the order of 10, the laws of geometric optics begin to apply.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diffuse_sky_radiation

2006-09-11 02:13:18 · answer #4 · answered by Amy 5 · 0 0

Rayleigh scattering (named after Lord Rayleigh) is the scattering of light, or other electromagnetic radiation, by particles much smaller than the wavelength of the light. It occurs when light travels in transparent solids and liquids, but is most prominently seen in gases. Rayleigh scattering of sunlight by the atmosphere is the main reason light from the sky is blue.

2006-09-11 19:33:19 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

In laymans terms: It has to do with the length of light rays. Blue just so happens to stop in the sky.

2006-09-11 02:07:24 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Well, maybe this is cheating---but I just went to Yahoo and searched for:

"why is the sky blue"

...and found many pages with explanations ranging from simplistic to quite scientifically detailed. (That's the kind of thing Yahoo's for, right?)

This one was pretty good:

http://www.sciencemadesimple.com/sky_blue.html

Cheers, A.

2006-09-11 02:12:45 · answer #7 · answered by Ander 3 · 0 0

sky appears to be blue because it reflects all LIGHTS except blue

2006-09-11 02:08:32 · answer #8 · answered by d_jha1 1 · 0 0

It reflects the blue colour of the ocean.

2006-09-11 15:27:19 · answer #9 · answered by pslaidler 1 · 0 1

Whoa whoa whoa....hold up, wait a minute, the sky's blue? when the hell did that happen?! why wasn't I told!?

2006-09-11 02:24:07 · answer #10 · answered by Jimmy H 4 · 0 0

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