The Color Of The
Sun
Although you might think the sun is yellow, it's actually white, with peak wavelength in the green part of the spectrum. |
Why Is the Sun
Yellow?
What Color Is
the Sun?
No, It's Not
Yellow!
by Anne Marie Helmenstine, Ph.D.
If you ask a random person to
tell you what color the sun is, chances are he will look at you like you're an
idiot and tell you the sun is yellow.
Would you be surprised to
learn the sun is not yellow?
It's actually white.
If you were to view the sun
from the International Space Station or the moon, you'd see its true color.
Check space photos online.
See the true color of the sun?
The reason the sun appears
yellow during the day from Earth, or orange to red at sunrise and sunset, is
because we view our favorite star through the filter of the atmosphere.
This
is one of the tricky ways in which light and our eyes change the way we
perceive colors, as is the case with the so-called impossible colors.
The True Color of the Sun
If
you view sunlight through a prism, you can see the entire range of wavelengths
of light.
Another example of the
visible portion of the solar spectrum is seen in the rainbow.
Sunlight isn't a single color
of light, but a combination of the emission spectra of all the elements in the
star.
All of the wavelengths
combine to form white light, which is the net color of the sun.
The sun emits different
amounts of various wavelengths.
If you measure them, the peak
output in the visible range is actually in the green portion of the spectrum
(not yellow).
However, visible light isn't
the only radiation emitted by the sun. There's also blackbody
radiation.
The average of the solar
spectrum is a color, which indicates the temperature of the sun and other
stars.
Our
sun averages about 5,800 Kelvin, which appears nearly white.
Out
of the brightest stars in the sky, Rigel appears blue and has a temperature
exceeding 100,000K, while Betelguese has a cooler temperature of 35,00K and
appears red.
How the Atmosphere Affects Solar Color
The
atmosphere changes the apparent color of the sun by scattering light.
The
effect is called Rayleigh scattering.
As
violet and blue light gets scattered away, the average visible wavelength or
"color" of the sun shifts toward red, but the light isn't entirely
lost.
The
scattering of short wavelengths of light by molecules in the atmosphere is what
gives the sky its blue color.
When viewed through the
thicker layer of atmosphere at sunrise and sunset, the sun appears more orange
or red.
When viewed through the
thinnest layer of air at midday, the sun appears closest to its true color, yet
still has a yellow tint.
Smoke and smog also scatter
light and can make the sun appear more orange or red (less blue).
The same effect also makes
the moon appear more orange or red when it is close to the horizon, but more
yellow or white when it is high in the sky.
Why Pictures of the Sun Look Yellow
If
you view a NASA photo of the sun, or a photo taken from any telescope, you're
usually viewing a false color image.
Often, the color that is
chosen for the image is yellow because it's familiar.
Sometimes photos taken
through green filters are left as-is because the human eye is most sensitive to
green light and can readily distinguish detail.
If you use a neutral density
filter to observe the sun from Earth, either as a protective filter for a telescope
or so you can observe a total solar eclipse, the sun will appear yellow because
you're reducing the amount of light that reaches your eyes, but not changing
the wavelength.
Yet,
if you used that same filter in space and didn't correct the image to make it
"prettier", you'd see a white sun.
Anne Marie Helmenstine, Ph.D. is an
author and consultant with a broad scientific and medical background.
Experience
Anne has
taught chemistry, biology, and physics at the high school, college, and
graduate level. In her doctoral work, Anne developed ultra-sensitive chemical
detection and medical diagnostic tests. She has worked abstracting/indexing
diverse scientific literature for the Department of Energy. She presently works
as a freelance writer and scientific consultant. She enjoys adapting lab-based
science projects so that they can be performed safely at home.
Education
Dr.
Helmenstine has bachelor of arts degrees in physics and mathematics with a
minor in chemistry from Hastings College in Nebraska and a doctorate of
philosophy in biomedical sciences from the University of Tennessee at
Knoxville.
Anne Marie Helmenstine, Ph.D.
Chemistry
is part of everyone's life, from cooking and cleaning to the latest computer
chip technology and vaccine development. It doesn't have to be intimidating and
it doesn't have to be hard to understand.
You can
read more about Anne's current and past work on her Google Profile: Anne Helmenstine. Find
Anne's printable periodic tables and science projects at Science Notes.
https://www.thoughtco.com/why-is-the-sun-yellow-603797.
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Anne Marie Helmenstine, Ph.D. is an author and consultant with a broad scientific and medical background.
You
might also like:
CLICK HERE:
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Works
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Multi-Media Filter, Highly-Activated Carbon Filter,
Zeolite-Process Water Softener With Brine Tank,
Fiberglass Ballast-Type Pressure Tank
(fully automatic backwash & regeneration)
|
PURICARE
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Systems
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Aganan, Pavia, Iloilo, Philippines
...
CLICK HERE . . . to view company profile . . .
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