Why is the sky blue? Thoroughly Explained Here!

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  • čas přidán 6. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 174

  • @Angel-ub2mk
    @Angel-ub2mk Před 5 lety +11

    2019 and I’m just watching this. Phenomenal breakdown for someone who has trouble understanding the slightest things. I fully understand.

    • @saviorlife6646
      @saviorlife6646 Před 3 lety

      I have you beat brother i have such a tough time understanding basic things i voted for Biden

  • @wkdj2522
    @wkdj2522 Před 10 lety +14

    wow. this vid should win an award. spot on explanation. complete and thorough, as advertised. thanks

  • @kalyanchakravarthycv5658
    @kalyanchakravarthycv5658 Před 9 lety +37

    Fantastic video. The best explanation that I've ever seen.!

  • @goldman32698
    @goldman32698 Před 11 lety +3

    Thank you for this explanation! But now it is just after sunset and the sky appears dark blue. Why is blue visible again?

  • @ahmedhamedalkalbani9222
    @ahmedhamedalkalbani9222 Před 10 lety +1

    Great explanation, This was not understood until 1881, when Lord Rayleigh showed that particles scatter short wavelengths more than longer wavelengths.

  • @nghiahuu176
    @nghiahuu176 Před 8 lety

    This solves tons of problem I'm encountering, millions of thanks.

  • @jonathanguinn3929
    @jonathanguinn3929 Před 9 lety +1

    great explanation, but I wish you talked more about sunrise and sunset. So do reds and oranges appear in the sky because the suns lower and light is being effected by more atmospheric scattering? i'm guessing the red light is able to evade all of the molecules in its path and reach our eyeball while the blue light hits every molecule and scatters out of our site?

  • @yuvrajchaudhry1905
    @yuvrajchaudhry1905 Před 11 lety +2

    I'm not sure that I completely understand, but uhhh, thank you all the same.

  • @GM-jr6ye
    @GM-jr6ye Před měsícem

    Trolling youtube for an explanation on why the sky is blue, best explanation so far. Well done Sir.

  • @violetl.4615
    @violetl.4615 Před 8 lety

    this is the best explanation I've found so far, and there are many many videos on CZcams about this topic... nice demonstration and good pacing. Thanks so much!

  • @GonzoTehGreat
    @GonzoTehGreat Před 12 lety

    Finally an answer worthy of the complexity of the question! Great job.

  • @hggfvjhg
    @hggfvjhg Před 4 lety +1

    complete explaination! unlike other videos that only explains part of the problem.

  • @Lessthanthreeedm
    @Lessthanthreeedm Před 6 lety +1

    And how would everything be if the sky wasn't blue but transparent? Would we be living like in a dome, seeing blackness far away while looking above us? Would it get darker cause instead of blue sky we'd have black space?

  • @guenterlohnert780
    @guenterlohnert780 Před 4 lety +1

    Absolutely perfect!! This video explains physically correct "Why is the sky blue?" Almost all the other hundreds of videos on CZcams on this subject are just plain rubbish. Congratulations!

  • @CursedJoker
    @CursedJoker Před 12 lety

    Well, not only you did answer, but you did it almost literally at the speed of light XD
    Thank you for the clear explanation, now i have a bunch of new words to look for.
    Keep up the good work
    Marco

  • @khkamal20
    @khkamal20 Před 11 lety +1

    Thanks :) very simple and informative....

  • @GunPowderVEVO
    @GunPowderVEVO Před 6 lety

    That was really well explained !!!
    Roughly better than many of those other videos that are trying to “ explain “ it ..
    Thanks man for your efforts

  • @carlosroso2513
    @carlosroso2513 Před 4 lety +1

    pretty much the best explanation of this topic after watching +20 vids

  • @niharsawant6335
    @niharsawant6335 Před 8 lety +5

    perfectly explained!

  • @jamesdearism
    @jamesdearism Před 6 lety +2

    Best i've ever seen you cleared my doubts

  • @bubulah1
    @bubulah1 Před 6 lety +1

    I'm confused...since when is GREEN a 'primary color'? Aren't the primary colors red, yellow and blue?? GREEN is a combination of yellow and blue....not primary.

  • @christianjourneytv1003
    @christianjourneytv1003 Před 4 měsíci

    this is the best explanation so far. thank you. I like the slowness.

  • @AKJain-bk4dm
    @AKJain-bk4dm Před 8 lety +4

    nice way of explanation .....loved it ....

  • @mattfog7955
    @mattfog7955 Před 2 měsíci

    the best video I have seen explaining this. Thank you and well done. Absolutely great

  • @planetarynebulae5251
    @planetarynebulae5251 Před 9 lety

    This is really good! You explained everything is great detail. This video should have 1,000,000 views.

  • @h2opiays753
    @h2opiays753 Před 11 lety +1

    ur the best teacher ever!!! Im 11 and i understand fully everything you said thanx

    • @LaughyMan03
      @LaughyMan03 Před 17 dny

      A mere child when you wrote this comment. I wonder how you are doing in life now as a 22-year-old adult. I hope you're doing well.

  • @sundarchannel
    @sundarchannel Před 12 lety +1

    wow, great, super, excellent, splendid, awesome tutorial............

  • @rachitmathurs
    @rachitmathurs Před 12 lety +1

    Thanks for your detailed explanation !!

  • @bengoodwin2988
    @bengoodwin2988 Před 4 lety

    Excellent explanation! Thank you for helping me see the light.
    (and thank you to my dog for typing this for me).

  • @Akshya101
    @Akshya101 Před 11 lety

    cool..thanks for the answer.i was thinking of interference, diffraction n qm effects.

  • @remediosgato6210
    @remediosgato6210 Před 10 lety

    please do more videos about why is the sky blue so that i can get the main point in defending my case study.

  • @ShirtOffLJay
    @ShirtOffLJay Před 12 lety +1

    this was perfect. thanks a lot.

  • @ajaymanh
    @ajaymanh Před 4 lety

    brilliant.. haven't ever even when I was studying had come across this kind of explanation to understand this concept.. beautifully explained. Cloud contains water molecules which are bigger in size than the wavelength of the light photons, hence no rayleigh effect is observed the clouds and all colour photons pass through it in a straight line and thus the clouds appears white.

  • @jaymejia8191
    @jaymejia8191 Před 10 lety

    thank you for the very thorough explanation. I was a big fan of how you incorporated all levels of analysis

  • @fnayo
    @fnayo Před 11 lety

    I think the light is being "scattered" due to electromagnetic oscillation of a molecule -- a more energetic photon will cause more oscillation to molecules that it travels near and therefore more "scattering".

  • @Potatoflesh
    @Potatoflesh Před 9 lety +1

    Great video! You did a great deal less hand waving than other explanations I've seen.

  • @davidizquierdogomez
    @davidizquierdogomez Před 6 lety +1

    so it means that travelled distance has some important role in the equation....is there any equation taking distance into account?

  • @Shrilaraune
    @Shrilaraune Před 4 lety +1

    This is amazing. I think the only thing that has me confused is the two different uses of intensity?
    We have intensity as in the chances of a photon entering your eye (proportional to 1/λ^4) and then we also have the intensity that decreases as photons are scattered.
    With the first, red light has a low intensity (well really is proportional to a lower number than say blue light) and so scatters less
    With the second, red light scatters less and so the intensity is higher or remains higher.
    Can anyone help with this?

  • @sunduchinna3809
    @sunduchinna3809 Před 7 lety +2

    superb

  • @Alfster18
    @Alfster18 Před 11 lety

    Great video, thank you! Why is the sky much lighter near the horizon during the day? If you are looking at the horizon during the day then are you not looking through more of the atmosphere (like at sunset) so why is it pale blue/whitish?

  • @CursedJoker
    @CursedJoker Před 12 lety +1

    I have one question, i hope the author will see this:
    Doesn't the scattered light lose any energy after each scatter? i thought that every scattering shifted the frequency down a lil' bit, thus bringing the color from bluer to redder. Am i getting this wrong?
    Thanks

  • @ollieh452
    @ollieh452 Před 9 lety

    Excellent video, thoroughly explained.

  • @OutTryingIt
    @OutTryingIt Před 11 lety

    Hi, this helps a lot but I'm still a little confused. Does it mean that there are receptors in our eyes to see violet as well just that it is not as prominent as the other colours? Because in part 2 you talked about the receptors giving us colour but it was a consequence of the two colours only. So if we see violet, it could mean the 3 main colours (RGB) combine together such that violet is formed or just pure violet comes out? Thanks for the help :)

  • @alh5200
    @alh5200 Před 11 lety +1

    Excellent video! It's a huge help! Thanks!

  • @jiddey
    @jiddey Před 7 lety +1

    Thank you for the really nice explanation..

  • @stanlee4892
    @stanlee4892 Před 9 lety +3

    Why does the light from other stars not scatter in our atmosphere as the sun does? I mean there is nothing else that scatters these lights in space before it reaches us right?

    • @perimanarnaitis1690
      @perimanarnaitis1690 Před 9 lety +2

      Stan Lee They do scatter actually but the light from the stars has significantly lower intensity since it comes from very very very very far away so the only way to notice that light with your eyes is to look at it directly at night. Otherwise, it just not noticeable enough. In case we had extremely powerful sensors in our bodies we could see the scattering of every star that we can see on the sky.

    • @FugieGamers
      @FugieGamers Před 4 lety

      It does scatter, but we can barely see it. That's probably the reason why the night sky is slightly blue/purple and not completely black :)

  • @KLiCuk1
    @KLiCuk1 Před 10 lety

    Great explanation - my 9yr old son gets this now :-)

  • @thinking1st
    @thinking1st Před 11 lety

    You are a great teacher.

  • @JuandiegoFA
    @JuandiegoFA Před 12 lety

    Very well done, thank you very much!

  • @palak6981
    @palak6981 Před 7 lety +1

    great....i loved it

  • @Subfightr
    @Subfightr Před 11 lety +1

    Oh my Darwin that was beautiful! Thank you so very much for your hard work in sharing your knowledge and doing such a wonderful job.

  • @RiGuy234
    @RiGuy234 Před 10 lety +5

    ok we know the equation for rayleight scattering has power to the 4th on the bottom but how come the sky is blue and not violet?

    • @augustobarreto9190
      @augustobarreto9190 Před 10 lety +1

      Because of the size of the scatterer particle...

    • @atillimac
      @atillimac Před 10 lety +4

      Because our eyes are more sensitive to blue than violet

    • @Ayuchuco
      @Ayuchuco Před 9 lety +3

      It is because sun sends more blue light than violet light (check out a solar radiation spectrum graph, wich is peak in the blue wavelength and drops for violet wavelength). Also, detecting light cones in our eyes are more sensitive for blue wavelength and drops for violet and red wavelengths (check out also a sensitivity graph for these cones).

    • @ernestonoiran1852
      @ernestonoiran1852 Před 6 lety

      from what I've read, the thing is, the amount of stimulation on the red cone due to the violet wavelength particles, equals (at least approximates) to the stimulation on the green cones due to the blue wavelength particles.
      So having a small green cone stimulation + small red cone stimulation + high blue cone stimulation = small white (all cones) + the rest of the blue = light blue (or sky blue).
      The important thing is to recognize that the 3 types of cones can be stimulated by any visible wavelength, it's just that they have a peak on sensitivity on 3 specific lengths.
      And violet is not the color of a 408nm wavelength, violet is the color created in our brain after mixing the stimulus of this 408nm photons over all of the 3 types of cones in our eyes.

  • @jonen9494
    @jonen9494 Před 7 lety +7

    Wow this is so cool!
    So this is also why clouds look extremely pretty in highly polluted cities at night, yeah? All of the particles in the pollution will scatter basically every blue and green light ray (obviously not all of them, but you get the picture) and the clouds will appear almost pure red?

  • @nisreenabbas4453
    @nisreenabbas4453 Před 10 měsíci

    Amazingly explained

  • @Beatdoza
    @Beatdoza Před 11 lety

    My good man.. you are concise and you're easy to understand. Thank you!

  • @yuvrajchaudhry1905
    @yuvrajchaudhry1905 Před 11 lety +1

    Why do smaller wavelengths of light scatter more, I mean I understand the equation, but why? Because it has more chances of interacting? But that wouldn't make sense as there are so many molecules out there!
    This also seems weirdly opposite to what the Tyndall effect does, why don't particles of true solution show that effect, if anything, they too are "significantly smaller than the wavelengths of light"!
    Is scattering really necessarily to actually see something?

  • @alejandropresto
    @alejandropresto Před 12 lety

    Excellent, the best explanation on this topic.

  • @katie101371
    @katie101371 Před 11 lety +1

    Because blue light has a short wavelength, it is scattered. so where does the remaining light with the longer wavelengths go?

    • @SerBallister
      @SerBallister Před 8 lety

      They are less scattered / point more toward the observer, hence red/yellow sunsets.

  • @HarshSingh-ut4hx
    @HarshSingh-ut4hx Před 7 lety +1

    awesome sir

  • @Beniguitar94
    @Beniguitar94 Před 8 lety +1

    Thank you!

  • @gatoklimt4216
    @gatoklimt4216 Před 10 lety

    I enjoyied very much your explanation, and i learned a lot ! thanks =) please keep making videos

  • @mohsinrazakhan3892
    @mohsinrazakhan3892 Před 4 lety

    Thank you very very much. ..... Now i have a good concept about light and colour.....شکریہ

  • @rishavthakur8913
    @rishavthakur8913 Před 6 lety

    Perfect explanation

  • @yeeguan99
    @yeeguan99 Před 5 lety

    Best explanation ever!! Thanks!

  • @entropyz5242
    @entropyz5242 Před 6 lety

    Wow. Excellent explanation.

  • @Solarstormflare
    @Solarstormflare Před 11 lety

    lol we have to watch this for our science homework. Pretty good!

  • @shridharvannam8408
    @shridharvannam8408 Před 10 lety +1

    thank you. it was really great

  • @hugolast3452
    @hugolast3452 Před 10 lety

    Thanks a lot. Very good explanation.

  • @adosar7261
    @adosar7261 Před 5 lety

    when you said deflected or scattered you mean that the photon is absorbed by the molecule and remitted ? thanks in advance.

  • @perimanarnaitis1690
    @perimanarnaitis1690 Před 9 lety

    Perfect! Simply perfect! Keep up the good work. Subscribed!

  • @someguy8139
    @someguy8139 Před 8 lety +6

    this is kiiiiiinda misleading cuz the colored photons your virtual man is seeing are actually showing up in the retina... grass for example absorbs all colors except for the wavelength known as green.. so grass isn't actually green, it is kicking off the green cuz it can't absorb it.. so it's actually all other colors except green. Trippy right? The electrical wavelengths strike the retinal sensors which correlate to specific wavelengths, which we have labeled as RGB. Also to make things more interesting, your photoreceptor cones and rods are actually facing in towards your skull and not facing out of the eyes.. It's like taking a solar panel (receptor) and burying it in the ground, while it's wire comes out and goes into your house. Somehow the wire is picking up the light (photons), sending the electricity down into the receptor in the ground and then re routing that new information back up the wire that goes into your house to be seen or registered. Nucking futz. Our retina is like a tv screen, and requires green because of the white light that can penetrate green's layer as to modify a plethora of different shades and etc.. When you paint, you substitute green for yellow, because yellow has the white light inside of it.. metaphorically speaking.. yellow is lighter then green and when you mix the paint on paper, there is no white light being projected from the paper in order to mix and match the entire visual spectrum. Also, look into CMYK and RGB differences.. if you work with adobe programs you'll know what I'm taking about. Also if your into cult shit, there are the prime ruling colors.. they rule because they create the other colors. Stimulating both R and B for example would produce the phenomenon known as purple. So half of your colors like.. don't even really exist. Colors are really really fucking weird.

    • @rustyshackleferd204
      @rustyshackleferd204 Před 6 lety +2

      So by that logic the sky is not blue, it's black, yellow, red, green, purple, white, pink, orange......

  • @anayatbhat3365
    @anayatbhat3365 Před 4 lety

    Great explanation...

  • @rosek6393
    @rosek6393 Před 5 lety +1

    amazing video now i under stand

  • @thlai9460
    @thlai9460 Před 10 lety +1

    here's a stupid question, why the larger wavelength of the light, the harder it will scatter?

    • @augustobarreto9190
      @augustobarreto9190 Před 10 lety

      Not really... Rayleigh scattering it's a model that might explain a lot of optical phenomena, but for larger wavelenght, will be larger particles (including molecules and other kinds of particles), for those ones, another kind of scattering explains that, the lorentz-mie scattering.

  • @Akshya101
    @Akshya101 Před 11 lety

    y is that light becms all nutty when it encountres anythng smaller than its wavelength?gorgeous explanation!keep up the gud work..

  • @garettclement6671
    @garettclement6671 Před 4 lety

    Why isn't CZcams promoting this video though?

  • @jacknick7582
    @jacknick7582 Před 6 lety

    thanks!

  • @lelem1014
    @lelem1014 Před 2 lety

    2021 thank u for this information 💜

  • @OSAMAMAful
    @OSAMAMAful Před 3 lety

    Great explanation!!

  • @AnnieeBubble
    @AnnieeBubble Před 10 lety +3

    Very helpful, thank you! Does the sun only give out red, green and blue light then?

    • @florarenales2002
      @florarenales2002 Před 10 lety +1

      No. It gives out all sorts of light. All the colors, plus the rest of the electromagnetic wavelengths (ex: xrays, gamma rays, microwaves, etc).

    • @jazaniac
      @jazaniac Před 10 lety +1

      To add on to what Flor said, it's not that the Sun only puts out that light, it's that our eyes can only detect those three colors and their combinations.

    • @NormadYT
      @NormadYT Před 6 lety

      Those are the primary colours yes

  • @theorangejuiceprogrammer9227

    Thank you! :)

  • @Scholar4777
    @Scholar4777 Před 5 lety

    So why can't we see the stars in the picture of our planet? Does that have to do with reflection of light?

  • @MrLewisMovies
    @MrLewisMovies Před 11 lety +1

    Why doesn't the man see three different colors from three different lights? If i have 3 different colored flash lights on my desk, i can see the photons from each flashlight individually. So why do they blend to make one color in the video?

  • @OutTryingIt
    @OutTryingIt Před 11 lety

    oh so when we see violet, only the blue receptor is being used? Thanks again for the help :)

  • @imsamv
    @imsamv Před 11 lety

    great video.. but I had a doubt .. Is rayleigh scattering the same as tyndall effect?

  • @alexkwok2644
    @alexkwok2644 Před 10 lety

    awesome Explanation!!!

  • @62331023
    @62331023 Před 9 lety

    Amazing thank you! I really liked the animation with the photon canons :p

  • @maggie02683
    @maggie02683 Před 11 lety

    thanksss!! very good explanation...i hope im better at physics

  • @PRIYANELANGOVAN
    @PRIYANELANGOVAN Před 11 lety

    great teacher

  • @seshachary5580
    @seshachary5580 Před 5 lety

    very educative thank you regards

  • @naqiyahmulachelah5668
    @naqiyahmulachelah5668 Před 5 lety

    THANK YOU SO MUCH THAT WAS SO CLEAR AND SMOOTH!! HAVE A GOOD LIFE SIR!!

  • @Tereyakiz
    @Tereyakiz Před 11 lety

    this deserves more view ! great video thanks !

  • @ashutoshbhakuni303
    @ashutoshbhakuni303 Před 7 lety

    Great video!!
    Does Raman scattering also takes place in this phenomenon?
    When does Raman scattering occur? Could you do a smilar awesome video for the colour of oceans?

  • @judyjudywong
    @judyjudywong Před 9 lety

    Well explained! Ty!

  • @siddharthkatyal
    @siddharthkatyal Před 7 lety +2

    Nice vid n thanks

  • @hanarakaybaban5192
    @hanarakaybaban5192 Před 8 lety +1

    viva well done

  • @heiraction883
    @heiraction883 Před 9 lety

    this was so good! thank you so much for doing this!!!!

  • @sundarchannel
    @sundarchannel Před 12 lety

    How did u make the simulation??? with which software??

  • @ashishdawar09
    @ashishdawar09 Před 11 lety

    God bless you for uploading such a valuable video.

  • @OutTryingIt
    @OutTryingIt Před 11 lety

    Hi I have a question regarding the white light. Isn't all 7 colours (red to violet) part of white light and not just the red, blue and green? So if violet light waves enter my eyes what will i see? Because now it's not a combination of the 3 essential colours but instead it's the pure violet colour. Thanks for the help!