The sun is star but why it looks yellow in colour and all stars white
rahimkhan2:
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◼️◾hiiii mate!!!!!
◾it's a nice question
◾White light is a combination of all colours prodused equally by a glowing object.
◾A glowing object that appears blue is blue because it's producing more blue light than it is producing red, orange, yellow, green light.
◾two reasons why sun appears yellow
◾1. The Sun's surface temperature (5,500 degrees C) produces a range of visible light (red to blue) in which yellow is slightly plentiful, but not much more than other colors it produces. If the Sun were cooler, say 2,500 degrees C, it would look red, like the stars Antares and Betelgeuse. Or if the Sun were hotter, say 15,000 degrees C, it would look blue, like the star Rigel.
◾2 The Earth's atmosphere acts as a kind of light filter. Some colors are filtered more than others. The Sun is slightly yellow in color, but the Earth's atmosphere makes the Sun look more yellow than it appears.
If you were to observe it from space where it would appear more white than yellow. If you go to higher altitudes such as around 11,000 ft elevation, the Sun looks less yellow and more white than it does at sea level.
I hope it helps✍️✍️
@Noor!!!!!!!
◾it's a nice question
◾White light is a combination of all colours prodused equally by a glowing object.
◾A glowing object that appears blue is blue because it's producing more blue light than it is producing red, orange, yellow, green light.
◾two reasons why sun appears yellow
◾1. The Sun's surface temperature (5,500 degrees C) produces a range of visible light (red to blue) in which yellow is slightly plentiful, but not much more than other colors it produces. If the Sun were cooler, say 2,500 degrees C, it would look red, like the stars Antares and Betelgeuse. Or if the Sun were hotter, say 15,000 degrees C, it would look blue, like the star Rigel.
◾2 The Earth's atmosphere acts as a kind of light filter. Some colors are filtered more than others. The Sun is slightly yellow in color, but the Earth's atmosphere makes the Sun look more yellow than it appears.
If you were to observe it from space where it would appear more white than yellow. If you go to higher altitudes such as around 11,000 ft elevation, the Sun looks less yellow and more white than it does at sea level.
I hope it helps✍️✍️
@Noor!!!!!!!
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this is because
⬇️⬇️⬇️⬇️⬇️⬇️⬇️⬇️⬇️⬇️
Big blue ones that shine in the belt of the constellation Orion and other places.
And there are ordinary yellow ones like our sun that might be stable and warm enough to support life.
The color of a star is linked to its surface temperature.
The hotter the star, the shorter the wavelength of light it will emit.
hope it works out for you
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