Comment on The colour of the Sun is white
scarabic@lemmy.world 1 year agoYep the atmosphere is transparent to all colors of light except blue. It doesn’t absorb blue light but it does get scattered. That’s why no matter where you look in the sky, you see blue. Because the gasses there are scattering blue light in all directions, including toward you.
vector_zero@lemmy.world 1 year ago
Isn’t that because blue is higher frequency and therefore refracts more than the other colors?
scarabic@lemmy.world 1 year ago
Good question. No idea. If higher frequency correlates with more scattering, then UV should also be scattered, right? Or is it something about blue visible light being just right for our kid of gases? Interesting question since that mix has changed over time. Perhaps the sky was another color during life’s early years. Is that why they’re called the Cyanobacteria? Because they turned the sky blue?
vector_zero@lemmy.world 1 year ago
My understanding is that higher frequency == more refraction, visible or not. So in theory, x and gamma radiation should also experience more refraction. Though I wonder at what point (it any) something too high energy can somehow “pierce” through a medium rather than refracting.