快猫短视频

Out of the blue

The sky is blue because the atmosphere scatters the shorter wavelength (blue) end of the...

The sky is blue because the atmosphere scatters the shorter wavelength (blue) end of the visible light spectrum more than the red end. As a result, more of this reaches the ground when the sun is high in the sky. Why then aren鈥檛 we aware of being bathed in a bluish light? Or do we in fact see a bluer world, but, because we always see it this way, our senses accept it as neutral? And is that why a tinge of blue is often added, for instance to washing detergent, to make things look whiter?

Philip Cunliffe, Bristol, UK

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