Why is the sky Blue, but the sun and Moon Aren't?
Most recent answer: 05/25/2015
- G. Kisteman (age 19)
Zwolle, Overijssel, Netherlands
As you learned, the sky is blue because the atmosphere scatters shorter-wavelength blue light more than longer-wavelength red light. That scattered light is what you see when you look at the sky, so it appears blue.
When you look at the moon or the sun, you're seeing the light that wasn't scattered by the atmosphere. This scattering only affects a small portion of the total light, so it normally doesn't have much effect on the apparent color of the sun or the moon. But if the sun is low in the sky, like at sunrise or sunset, its light travels through so much atmosphere that a significant portion of blue light is scattered away—making the sun appear red.
You can read more about scattering in the atmosphere (and see a cool picture) in .
Rebecca H.
(published on 05/25/2015)