Why is the sky blue?
A clear cloudless day-time sky is blue because
molecules in the air scatter blue light from the sun more than
they scatter red light. When we look towards the sun at sunset we see red and
orange colours because the blue light has been scattered out and
away from the line of sight.

The white light from the sun is a mixture of all colours of
the rainbow. This was demonstrated by Isaac Newton who
used a prism to separate the different colours
and so form a spectrum. The colours of light are
distinguished by their different wavelengths.
The visible part of the spectrum ranges
from red light with a wavelength of about 720 nm to
violet with a wavelength of about 380 nm with orange,
yellow, green, blue and indigo between. The three different
types of colour receptors in the retina of the human eye respond most
strongly to red, green and blue wavelengths giving us our colour
vision.
Tyndall Effect
The first steps towards correctly explaining the colour of the
sky were taken by John Tyndall in 1859. He discovered that when
light passes through a clear fluid holding small particles in
suspension, the shorter blue wavelengths are scattered more
strongly than the red. This can be demonstrated by shining
a beam of white light through a tank of water with a little
milk or soap mixed in. From the side the beam can be seen by the
blue light it scatters, but the light seen directly from
the end is reddened after it has passed through the tank.
The scattered light can also be shown to be polarised using
a filter of polarised light, just as the sky appears a deeper
blue through polarised sun glasses.
This is most correctly called the Tyndall effect but it
is more commonly known to physicists as Rayleigh scattering
after Lord Rayleigh who studied it in more detail a few years
later. He showed that the amount of light scattered is
inversely proportional to the fourth power of wavelength
for sufficiently small particles. It follows that blue light
is scattered more than red light by a factor of
(700/400)4 ~= 10.
Dust or Molecules?
Tyndall and Rayleigh thought that the blue colour of the
sky must be due to small particles of dust and droplets
of water vapour in the atmosphere. Even today people sometimes incorrectly
say that this is the case. Later scientists realised that if it
were true there would be more variation of sky colour with
humidity or haze conditions than was observed so they supposed
correctly that the molecules of oxygen and nitrogen in the air
are sufficient to account for the scattering. The case was
finally settled by Einstein in 1911 who calculated the detailed
formula for the scattering of light from
molecules which was found to be in agreement with experiment.
He was even able to use the calculation as a further verification
of Avogadro's number when compared with observation. The
molecules are able to scatter light because the electromagnetic
field of the light wave induces an electric dipole moment.
Why not violet?
If shorter wavelengths are scattered most strongly
there is a puzzle as to why the sky does not appear violet,
the colour with the shortest visible wavelength. The spectrum
of light emission from the sun is not constant at all
wavelengths and is absorbed by the high atmosphere so there
is less violet in the light. Our eyes are also less sensitive
to those colours. That is part of the answer yet
a rainbow shows that there remains a significant amount of
visible light coloured indigo and violet beyond the blue.
The rest of the
answer to this puzzle is in the way our vision works. We have
three types of colour receptors, or cones, in our retina. They
are called red, blue and green because they respond most
strongly to light at those wavelengths. As they are stimulated
in different proportions our visual system constructs the
colours we see.

response curves for the three types of cone in the human eye
When we look up at the sky the red cones respond to
the small amount of scattered red light and also less
strongly to orange and yellow wavelengths. The green cones
respond to yellow and the more strongly scattered green
and green-blue wavelengths. The blue cones are stimulated
by colours near blue wavelengths which are very strongly scattered.
If there were no indigo and violet in the spectrum the sky
would appear blue with a slight green tinge. However, the most
strongly scattered indigo and violet wavelengths stimulate
the red cones slightly as well as the blue, which is why
these colours appear blue with an added red tinge. The
net effect is that the red and green cones are stimulated
about equally by the light from the sky while the blue is
stimulated more strongly. This combination accounts for
the pale sky blue colour. It may not be a coincidence that
our vision is adjusted to see the sky as a pure hue. We
have evolved to fit in with our environment and the ability
to separate natural colours most clearly is probably a survival
advantage.

A multi-coloured sunset over the Firth of Forth in Scotland.
Sunsets
When the air is clear the sunset will appear yellow
because the light from the sun has passed a long distance
through air and some of the blue light has been scattered away. If the
air is polluted with small particles, natural or otherwise,
the sunset will be more red.
Sunsets over the sea may also be orange due to salt particles in
the air which are effective Tyndall scatterers. The sky
around the sun is seen reddened as well as the light coming
directly from the sun. This is because all light is scattered
relatively well through small angles but blue light is then
more likely to be scattered twice or more over the greater
distances leaving the yellow, red and orange colours.

A blue haze over the mountains of Les Vosges in France.
Blue Haze and Blue Moon
Clouds and dust haze appear white because they consist of
particles larger than the wavelengths of light and scatter
all wavelengths equally (Mie scattering). Sometimes there may
be other particles in the air which are much smaller. Some
mountainous regions are famous for their blue haze. Aerosols of terpenes
from the vegetation react with ozone in the atmosphere to form
small particles about 200 nm across which scatter the blue light.
A forest fire or volcanic eruption may occasionally fill the atmosphere
with fine particles of 500-800 nm across which are the right size to
scatter red light. This gives the opposite to the usual Tyndall effect
and may cause the moon to have a blue tinge since the red light
is scattered out. This is very rare, literally once in a blue
moon.
Opalescence
The Tyndall effect is responsible for some other blue
coloration's in nature such as blue eyes, the opalescence
of some gem stones and the colour in the blue jay's wing.
The colours can vary according to the size of the scattering
particles. When a fluid is near its critical temperature and
pressure tiny density fluctuations are responsible for a blue
coloration known as critical opalescence. People have also
copied these natural effects by making ornamental glasses
impregnated with particles to give them a blue sheen. Not
all blue colouring in nature is caused by scattering. Light
under the sea is blue because water absorbs longer wavelength
of light through distances over about 20 metres. When viewed
from the beach the sea is also blue because it reflects the
sky, of course. Some birds and butterflies get their blue
coloration's by diffraction effects.
Why is the Mars sky red?
Images sent back from the Viking Mars landers in 1977
and from Pathfinder in 1997 showed a red sky seen
from the Martian surface. This was due to red iron rich
dusts thrown up in dust storms which occur from
time to time on Mars. The colour of the Mars sky will
change according to weather conditions. It should be
blue when there have been no recent storms but it
will be darker than the earth daytime sky because of
Mars' thinner atmosphere.
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