The Sun is White but the Sky steals its Blue

Superfact 105: The Sun is white, but the Sky steals its Blue is a poetic way of saying that the sun’s light is scattered by the atmosphere giving the Sun a yellowish tint as well as giving us our blue sky. From space the sun looks completely white.

A bright white sun is setting over Earth. | The Sun is White but the Sky steals its Blue
Sunset from the International Space Station by NASA

Viewed from space the sun is entirely white. White light consists of a mix of all the colors of the rainbow. However, viewed from earth the sun has a yellow tint, which gets more pronounced, it even dips into orange, as the sun nears sunset. That does not happen in space as can be seen below in the one minute sunset timelapse video taken from the International Space Station.

Sunset Timelapse from the International Space Station

On earth the sunset looks more like something in the picture below.

The sun is setting over distant mountains. There are some clouds, a forest, and field in the foreground. The sun has a yellow tint; the clouds are slightly yellow-orange and sky above is blue. | The Sun is White but the Sky steals its Blue
The sky dusk has a dramatic background featuring a summer season golden sunset landscape. The light is at the horizon is an orange and yellow color with blue sky above. Shutterstock asset id: 2670235703 by Nature Peaceful

The sun is a so called yellow dwarf star, or a G-type main-sequence star. The term yellow dwarf is a bit of a misnomer, because they range in color from white, for more luminous G-types like the Sun, to only very slightly yellowish for less massive and less luminous G-type main-sequence stars. The sun emits all the colors of the rainbow simultaneously, but the most dominant color is green. However, this looks white to us.

When sunlight enters Earth’s atmosphere, tiny air molecules scatter shorter, blue wavelengths of light in all directions. This scattering is what makes the sky look blue. This is called Rayleigh scattering. Because much of the blue light is removed, the remaining wavelengths of light that reach your eyes combine to make the sun appear yellow. This is a super fact because it is a basic but surprising fact, and we know it is true.

Rayleigh Scattering

The blue color of the sky is caused by Rayleigh scattering of sunlight by the gases in the Earth’s atmosphere. The image below shows the degree to which Rayleigh scattering occurs at different wavelengths / frequencies of light. Blue has the shortest wavelength (highest frequency) for visible light and red the longest (lowest frequency). The curve shows that blue light scatters more than red light. It should be noted that UV light (not shown) scatter even more. The scattering curve shown is calculated for sunlight passing vertically through the atmosphere.

The graph shows the amount of scattering going from shorter wavelengths (higher frequences) on the left, to longer wavelengths (lower frequences) on the right. Blue has shorter wavelengths and red has longer wavelengths. The graph shows that blue scatter the most.
Figure showing the greater proportion of blue light scattered by the atmosphere relative to red light. Robert A. Rohde derivative work:KES47 (talk) (converted to SVG)., CC BY-SA 3.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/, via Wikimedia Commons.



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Author: thomasstigwikman

My name is Thomas Wikman. I am a software/robotics engineer with a background in physics. I am currently retired. I took early retirement. I am a dog lover, and especially a Leonberger lover, a home brewer, craft beer enthusiast, I’m learning French, and I am an avid reader. I live in Dallas, Texas, but I am originally from Sweden. I am married to Claudia, and we have three children. I have two blogs. The first feature the crazy adventures of our Leonberger Le Bronco von der Löwenhöhle as well as information on Leonbergers. The second blog, superfactful, feature information and facts I think are very interesting. With this blog I would like to create a list of facts that are accepted as true among the experts of the field and yet disputed amongst the public or highly surprising. These facts are special and in lieu of a better word I call them super-facts.

41 thoughts on “The Sun is White but the Sky steals its Blue”

  1. Thanks for explaining Rayleigh scattering, Thomas. I never really wondered why the sky is blue; this is truly fascinating! I think it’s incredible that scientists know this, and makes me wonder why I don’t question things I see more often. My son will love this, as he was driving at something similar quite recently about the color of the ocean and seas.

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    1. Yes there are so many things that scientists have figured out that most of us don’t know about, even things that are kind of important and basic. Oh yes the ocean and the seas too. I would love to hear what he finds out.

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      1. I’m a casual Superman fan (I haven’t read any comic books featuring Supes since the 1970s, and I mainly watch Superman: The Movie now), so I know some, ha ha, Super Facts. Yep, the last son of Krypton derives his superpowers from the light of our “yellow” sun, which interacts with his denser Kryptonian molecular makeup. Exposure to red sunlight, like that which warmed and lit his destroyed home planet, takes away Supes’ “metahuman” powers. (And, of course, kryptonite, especially the green variety, can kill him.)

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                    1. I understand that and in either way….if so and probably I would like to keep in touch with you. Can we talk more on telegram ,WhatsApp or email due on the one you prefer most dear! so we can be talking more there because I don’t use this app that much due to the nature of my job.

                      Where do you prefer will be good for us to talk more outside there dear?

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  2. Another fascinating fact that makes sense. The sky is blue because of the sun, so when it’s raining and grey, those are just grey clouds blocking the blue sky? 😊

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  3. Thanks for the nice post about our star and its color. Yes, it’s a “yellow” dwarf mostly because yellow is in the middle of the visible spectrum where these stars emit most of their light. and it distinguishes it from blue stars whose light is biased toward the blue end of the spectrum and red stars whose light is biased toward that end.

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