Science, asked by ashish1272, 3 days ago

what is real colour of sky ​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
2

Answer:

Blue light is scattered in all directions by the tiny molecules of air in Earth's atmosphere. Blue is scattered more than other colors because it travels as shorter, smaller waves. This is why we see a blue sky most of the time. Closer to the horizon, the sky fades to a lighter blue or white.

Explanation:

hope it's helpful,,,,

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Answered by kritikagarg6119
1

Answer:

As far as wavelengths go, Earth's sky really is a bluish violet. But because of our eyes we see it as pale blue

Explanation:

  • The sky is blue — physicists tell us — because blue light in the sun's rays bends more than red light. But this extra bending, or scattering, applies just as much to violet light, so it is reasonable to ask why the sky isn't purple.
  • Looking toward the sun we thus see a brilliant white light while looking away we would see only the darkness of empty space. Since there is virtually nothing in space to scatter or re-radiate the light to our eye, we see no part of the light and the sky appears to be black.
  • The reason we see the sky as blue is because the molecules in the air scatter the light absorbing most wavelengths of light except for blue. In addition to this the sky is gray and overcast because of the water droplets in the atmosphere in the forms of clouds and humidity.
  • The sun emits a higher concentration of blue light waves in comparison violet. Furthermore, as our eyes are more sensitive to blue rather than violet this means to us the sky appears blue.

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