The sky is blue because molecules in the air scatter blue light from the sun more than they scatter red light. When we look towards the sun at sunset, we see red and orange colours because the blue light has been scattered out and away from the line of sight.
The first steps towards correctly explaining the colour of the sky were taken by John Tyndall in 1859. He discovered that when light passes through a clear fluid holding small particles in suspension, the shorter blue wavelengths are scattered more strongly than the red. This can be demonstrated by shining a beam of white light through a tank of water with a little milk or soap mixed in. From the side, the beam can be seen by the blue light it scatters; but the light seen directly from the end is reddened after it has passed through the tank. The scattered light can also be shown to be polarised using a filter of polarised light, just as the sky appears a deeper blue through polaroid sun glasses.
This is most correctly called the Tyndall effect, but it is more commonly known to physicists as Rayleigh scattering--after Lord Rayleigh, who studied it in more detail a few years later. He showed that the amount of light scattered is inversely proportional to the fourth power of wavelength for sufficiently small particles. It follows that blue light is scattered more than red light by a factor of (700/400)4 ~= 10.
2006-12-05 10:09:58
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answer #1
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answered by deepseaofblankets 5
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Because of diffuse skylight radiation. Our atmosphere scatters the light that reaches us. Depending on the angle in which sunlilght hits the atmosphere, the light's wavelength shifts towards the blue spectrum or the red. That is why we have a blue sky during the day when the sun is above us, and why sunsets are red, when the light comes from the side. A more interesting question is, "why isn't the sky purple."
2006-12-05 10:08:31
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answer #2
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answered by Pecos 4
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because of the amount of nitrogen in the air
2006-12-05 10:04:33
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answer #3
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answered by Best DJ 4
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