At night - stars and galaxies... In daytime - probably high-altitude aircraft or weather balloons.
blue with white things
If you get out your telescope and look high over the equator at sunset, you may be able to see a stationary satellite. It will look like a pinpoint of light. During the daytime, There is too much light to see them.
Actually, the stars are JUST AS BRIGHT in the daytime! The problem is that the sky is so bright with refracted and scattered sunlight (the stuff that makes the sky blue) that even the brightest stars fade into obscurity in comparison. You can actually see the planet Venus in the daytime, if you have a small telescope or a pair of binoculars, and you know JUST where to look. The planet Venus, which shines like a beacon in the evening sky, is a tiny silver pinprick against the blue sky.
No, the sky appears to be a reddish-brown during daytime hours on Mars due to the atmosphere of the planet. At night the sky may appear black, similar to what is seen on Earth at night.
i don't think so, the blue color of the sky is because of the dispersion of light, as when the light reaches the sky it has minimum wavelength when reflected so it appears blue, as the blue color has minimum wavelength
Blue!
The brightness of the daytime sky is due to sunlight scattering off air molecules and particles in the atmosphere, illuminating the entire sky. The blue color of the sky is a result of shorter-wavelength blue light being scattered more than other colors by the gases and particles in the atmosphere, making the sky appear predominantly blue to our eyes.
At night - stars and galaxies... In daytime - probably high-altitude aircraft or weather balloons.
The Sky.
Because in the summer the constellation would be in the daytime sky.
It is called daytime.
The ocean is not naturally blue, the water reflects the rays from the sky. The sky is blue because A clear cloudless daytime 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.
during day: when light comes , the blue colour is scattererd the most(rayleigh's law) as it has the least wavelength. so sky is blue in day time. in night there is no light so scattering so as a result black in colour.
The light emitted from our own star, the Sun, is scattered within our atmosphere and creates the blue sky we see during the day. This blue sky is not as bright as our Sun, but is brighter than the light we receive from other stars. Hence the scattering of light obscures our view of the stars.
Generally only one, the Sun.
The ozone in the air