The sky is almost to change its color so that it will no longer be blue. The sky needs a break and wants to rest for a while. Do you know why?
To know why the sky is blue and why it wishes to change its color, check out this link: http://answers.yahoo.com/search/search_result;_ylt=AgGqcwu5DHNfnuk.aGfQEMMjzKIX?p=+Why+is+the+sky+blue+
Have a nice day! ♥
2006-10-15 16:37:26
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answer #1
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answered by ♥ lani s 7
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It is difficult to define precisely for several reasons. During daylight the sky has the appearance of a deep blue surface, but this is the result of the air scattering sunlight. [1] There is no "blue object" above the earth in any normal sense, so it is hard to say what object the sky is. The sky is thus sometimes defined as the denser gaseous zone of a planet's atmosphere. At night the sky has the appearance of a black surface or region scattered with stars. But if we then say that the sky is the entire visible universe, it would not be the same thing we see during the day.
2006-10-13 03:58:26
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answer #2
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answered by Joe Somebody 6
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ok here's the science part! the sky is blue due to the amount of dust particles in the atmosphere. as the yellow light from the sun hits the atmosphere the dust particles make the light (and so sky) appear blue. So I'm guessing your next question will be why at sun set and sun rise is the sky red? well that's easy too. it's all to do with the angle that the light hits the atmosphere. at sun rise/set the light passes through the dust at a lower angle so it appear red. as the sun rises the angle becomes more acute and so the sky changes to blue. hope this helps.
2006-10-13 04:09:18
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answer #3
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answered by Cruz 4
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There is a physical phenomenon called Rayleigh scattering that causes light to scatter when it passes through particles that have a diameter one-tenth that of the wavelength (color) of the light. Sunlight is made up of all different colors of light, but because of the elements in the atmosphere the color blue is scattered much more efficiently than the other colors.
So when you look at the sky on a clear day, you can see the sun as a bright disk. The blueness you see everywhere else is all of the atoms in the atmosphere scattering blue light toward you. (Because red light, yellow light, green light and the other colors aren't scattered nearly as well)
2006-10-13 04:01:28
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answer #4
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answered by virtualrealitys 2
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The sky is blue partly because air scatters short-wavelength light in preference to longer wavelengths. Where the sunlight is nearly tangent to the Earth's surface, 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, at sunrise and sunset.
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.
Individual gas molecules are too small to scatter light effectively. However, in a gas, the molecules move more or less independently of each-other, unlike in liquids and solids where the density is determined the molecule's sizes. So the densities of gases, such as pure air, are subject to statistical fluctuations. Significant fluctuations are much more common on a small scale. It is mainly these density fluctuations on a small (tens of nanometers) scale that cause the sky to be blue.
2006-10-14 18:21:46
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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It's due to a phenomenon called Rayleigh scattering. When light encounters particles much smaller than the wavelength of light, the light scatters. Atmospheric gas is an enormous resevoir of such particles. Short wavelengths scatter the most effectively, and blue has a short wavelength, so the blue light scatters and appears to fill the sky. Note that violet has a shorter wavelength than blue, but the human eye is not very good at seeing violet, so blue appears to dominate instead.
2006-10-13 04:02:51
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answer #6
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answered by DavidK93 7
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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
2006-10-13 03:59:45
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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The sky isn't blue, it is dark like the space. The blue colour is just the light from the sun which makes it blue, I think.
2006-10-13 03:59:47
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answer #8
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answered by Webballs 6
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The sky is blue because the atmosphere filters out all the other colours from the sun
2006-10-13 04:37:28
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answer #9
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answered by showtoes 1
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Sunlight reaches Earth's atmosphere and is scattered in all directions by all the gases and particles in the air. Blue light is scattered in all directions by the tiny molecules of air in Earth's atmosphere. Blue is scattered more than other colors because it travels as shorter, smaller waves. This is why we see a blue sky most of the time. :)
2006-10-13 04:00:40
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answer #10
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answered by ◙Blue-Eyed♥Red-Headed♥Bella◙ 4
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