China Naming Network - Baby naming - The sky in Stuttgart, Germany has turned to sulfur. Why is this rare weather?

The sky in Stuttgart, Germany has turned to sulfur. Why is this rare weather?

This phenomenon is caused by atmospheric refraction effect. The earth's atmosphere is full of different gas molecules, and different atmospheric molecules have different scattering effects on light. In the earth's atmosphere, nitrogen molecules and oxygen molecules have the most content, while nitrogen molecules and oxygen molecules have stronger scattering ability on blue light. Therefore, the thicker the atmosphere, the more oblique the angle of the sun, and the closer the color of the sky will be to yellow and orange.

Different gas molecules in the atmosphere have different light scattering effects, so different colors of the sky will appear.

1, Rayleigh scattering? Let the sky appear in various colors:

The color of the sky is mainly determined by sunlight. Although the sun we see in various photos is yellow and orange, the sunlight is actually white and contains all colors of light. If we really want to give the sun a color, the color that occupies the most spectrum in sunlight is actually green.

Although the spectral colors of sunlight are different, the difference between each color is very small, so it will not have a decisive impact on the color of the sky. The atmospheric composition of a planet is the key to determine the color of the sky.

At noon, the sun is closest to the ground, and the effect of Rayleigh scattering is not obvious, while the human eye is most sensitive to blue, so at noon, the sky we see is generally blue or white; In the evening, the sun gradually reaches the other hemisphere, and it takes a longer distance for light to reach the ground, and the effect of Rayleigh scattering will be more obvious. Blue light will gradually be scattered, and we will see a yellow-orange or even red sunset.

2, different planets have different colors of the sky:

The color of the sun will not change, but different planets have different atmospheres.

For a planet with a thin atmosphere such as Mars, the scattering effect of solar light has always been weak, so if we live on Mars, the sky will be white and blue at noon or in the evening, and no other special colors will appear.

On Titan, because there is a lot of methane in the atmosphere, the scattering effect is very obvious. In the daytime, the sky is yellow and orange, but in the evening, the color of the sky will turn brown, thus forming a unique brown sunset, and other planets can even have green sunsets.

why is the sky blue? This is a very difficult problem, which has been solved with the introduction of Rayleigh scattering principle.

All the colors in the world are actually given by the sun. Even the color of the sky is closely related to the sun. The sun selflessly provides all colors. What color the sky chooses depends on all kinds of molecules in the sky. Everything will turn yellow in foggy weather, which is actually a manifestation of Rayleigh scattering.