The sky can look green sometimes because light from the sun mixes with clouds and air in a special way.
Imagine you're playing with colored blocks, red, blue, yellow, green. When it's sunny, the sky looks blue, like a big blue block. But when there are lots of clouds or something happens near the horizon, like during sunrise or sunset, the light has to travel through more air and clouds. This is like shining a flashlight through a thick blanket, some colors get stronger, others fade.
Now think about mixing paints. If you mix blue with a little yellow, you get green. Sometimes, when the sun is low in the sky, that yellow light mixes with blue from the sky and clouds, making it look like the sky has turned green, just like your paint on the table!
Why does this happen more at certain times?
During sunrise or sunset, the sunlight travels through more of Earth's atmosphere. This makes some colors brighter than others. The blue light gets scattered more, but the yellow and red stay stronger. When there are clouds or a lot of dust in the air, they can mix these colors together, sometimes making the sky look green, like a fun new color you discovered while painting!
Examples
- A child notices the sky turning green during a thunderstorm and asks why it happens.
- During a family picnic, the sky turns green, surprising everyone.
- A person sees the sky turn green before a storm hits.
Ask a question
See also
- Why Do Paintings Look So Different in Real Life?
- What is Atmospheric perspective?
- Why Do Paintings Seem to Change When You Move?
- Why do things look lighter or bluer?
- Why Do Paintings Seem to Move When You Walk by Them?