pink
2007-03-07 12:33:03
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Pretty much every area of the sky has something in it, if only your eyes worked as well as a camera. Since your eye 'refresh' rate is about 1/30th of a second, you just can't process the one or two photons we're getting from the most distant galaxies. Which is why, when Hubble photographed the famous Deep Field, they had to leave the camera shutter open for about two weeks. And what they saw - millions and millions of galaxies. So there's something almost everywhere you look, if only you could look long enough.
2007-03-07 21:23:20
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answer #2
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answered by eri 7
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The universe has no color to it. Some thing has color. The universe itself is no thing, just completely empty void that consists of nothing at all. Floating in that nothingness is everything that exists as solids or gases, suns stars and their planets, rocks and miscellany. And, very rarely, life supporting orbs like earth.
2007-03-07 21:43:10
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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They have actually applied the method of "color averaging" and determined that it would be a pinkish beige color. Keep in mind that the EM frequencies that humans can see is a very narrow part of the spectrum.
2007-03-07 20:53:10
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answer #4
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answered by Scarp 3
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Nothing dude, it's completely the same thing
2007-03-07 20:32:01
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answer #5
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answered by Computer_Wiz148 2
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i dont know about you but i see more blackness.
2007-03-07 21:07:29
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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its black everywhere. unless you were looking through a xray telescope.
2007-03-07 21:21:25
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answer #7
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answered by huhwhatcaca 2
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