Science, asked by Anonymous, 4 hours ago

 \huge\bf\star\fbox\red{Question:-}

Why sky is blue ? ​

Answers

Answered by ItzBlinkingstar
4

Answer:

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The sky is blue due to a phenomenon called Raleigh scattering. This scattering refers to the scattering of electromagnetic radiation (of which light is a form) by particles of a much smaller wavelength. ... These shorter wavelengths correspond to blue hues, hence why when we look at the sky, we see it as blue

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\: \: \: \: \:  \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \: \:  \: \: \: \: \: \: \:  \: \:  \: \: \: \: \: \: \:  \: \: \: \: \: \: \:  \: \: \: \: \: \: \:  \: \: \: \: \: \: \:  \: \: \boxed {\boxed{ { \blue{ \bf{ {I  \:Hope \:   It  \: Helps  \:  You}}}}}}

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 \bf\: \: \: \: \:  \: \: \underline{ \underline \pink{ ItzBlinkingstar}}

Answered by ItzSweetPoison01
4

Answer:

\huge\mathbb\fcolorbox{purple}{lavenderblush}{✰Answer}

The sky is blue due to a phenomenon called Raleigh scattering. This scattering refers to the scattering of electromagnetic radiation (of which light is a form) by particles of a much smaller wavelength. ... These shorter wavelengths correspond to blue hues, hence why when we look at the sky, we see it as blue.

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