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2007-04-22 18:05:15 · 17 answers · asked by tandita 2 in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

17 answers

It looks orange because of two possibilities, both of which involve the Earth's atmosphere. If you see the moon during sunrise or sunset, it will appear to be orange for the same reason the sun looks orange at that time. Due to impurities in the atmosphere, the light is refracted to appear more orange than white.

Alternately, during a lunar eclipse, some or all of the moon will appear to take on an orange-ish cast, because the sun's light is being refracted by the Earth's atmosphere and giving an orange glow. During a total lunar eclipse, the moon is basically being lit by all of the world's combined sunrises and sunsets at once! (From the moon, the Earth would appear as a big red ring, during a total lunar eclipse.)

2007-04-22 18:09:54 · answer #1 · answered by P.I. Joe 6 · 1 1

It has to do with the way the light that's reflected off of the moon enters and interacts with particles in the atmosphere. The particles act like a prism, which seperates out the colors of the spectrum. Sometimes it just so happens that the color gets seperated out in such a way that orange is the color we see. It's basically the same reason the sky is blue, but more rainbow-like during sunrise & sunset. Notice sunrise, sunset, and orange moon all occur when the sun / moon are low in the horizon.

It has nothing to do with pollution. Due to the angle of the light when it enters the atmosphere, it has to pass through more of the natural atmosphere, which acts as a filter. The atmosphere scatters the green, blue, and violet hues, and yellow, orange, or red is what's left.

2007-04-22 18:07:30 · answer #2 · answered by Mickey Mouse Spears 7 · 1 0

The moon goes orangy sometimes because it reflects the light of the sun...

2007-04-22 19:38:31 · answer #3 · answered by Mad 1 · 0 0

Why the sky is blue? Why the Sunset are orangy? All three questions have the same answer: The shorter waves have more dispersion than the longer ones.

2007-04-22 18:17:43 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

it extremely is because of the fact of ways mild refracts interior the process the ambience and is maximum undemanding throughout a lunar eclipse even with the undeniable fact that it may happen while the Moon is merely close to the horizon, or each and every time the mild has to pass by lots of atmosphere to get to it. it extremely isn't any longer purely because of the fact of pollutants nonetheless pollutants does provide a reddish tinge even with the undeniable fact that it extremely is from the comparable mechanisms that makes the sky blue, Rayleigh scattering scatters the blue frequencies letting the crimson pass by.

2016-10-28 17:57:42 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

The atmosphere scatters blue light, which makes the sky blue, but that only leaves red light when something like the moon shines through many layers of the atmosphere.

2007-04-22 18:20:12 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Because the clouds cover the moon and with the light reflection it shows through the cloud giving the orange affect. The orange is pollution

2007-04-22 18:08:26 · answer #7 · answered by mini_4_sam 1 · 0 0

Just for your/our entertainment !!

Is orangy a word??
Spell Check says NO!

2007-04-22 18:13:36 · answer #8 · answered by BigTip$ 6 · 0 0

Evening time moon go down and slowely slowely he change the colour in orange.

2007-04-22 18:37:04 · answer #9 · answered by yash 1 · 0 0

Dust in the atmosphere.

2007-04-22 18:08:20 · answer #10 · answered by Helmut 7 · 1 0

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