Why Is the Sky Blue? | NASA Space Place – NASA Science for Kids Why Is the Sky Blue? The Short Answer: Sunlight reaches Earth's atmosphere and is scattered in all directions by all the gases and particles in the air Blue light is scattered more than the other colors because it travels as shorter, smaller waves This is why we see a blue sky most of the time
Home | NASA Space Place – NASA Science for Kids NASA’s award-winning Space Place website engages upper-elementary-aged children in space and Earth science through interactive games, hands-on activities, fun articles and short videos With material in both English and Spanish and numerous resources for kids, parents and teachers, Space Place has something for everyone
Supermoon, Blood Moon, Blue Moon and Harvest Moon - NASA Space Place The air molecules from Earth's atmosphere scatter out most of the blue light The remaining light reflects onto the Moon's surface with a red glow, making the Moon appear red in the night sky The name "blood moon" is also sometimes used for a Moon that appears reddish because of dust, smoke or haze in the sky
Earth | NASA Space Place – NASA Science for Kids Why Is the Sky Blue? explore explore "See" inside a closed box! do Make a topographic map! do explore How Do Hurricanes Form? explore What Is El Niño? Learn all about it then make a yummy dessert that maps the ocean's heat do Get your Gummy Greenhouse Gases! Make pollutants from gumdrops, then gobble them up! do The Greenhouse Effect explore
How Does GPS Work? | NASA Space Place – NASA Science for Kids And I know where you are in the sky right now, too! Let me listen to your signal to figure out how far away I am from each of you… Oh! I must be right here! There’s no other place that is the right distance away from each of you! OK, let me check the internet to see what pizza places are near me…” And all that happens in an instant
Troposphere | NASA Space Place – NASA Science for Kids The last 1% is made of argon, water vapor, and carbon dioxide When you feel the wind on your face, see clouds in the sky, and watch a bird flap its wings in flight, you’re experiencing the troposphere It’s a pretty nice layer to call home Visit other layers in Earth's atmosphere Go out to the stratosphere
Why Is the Sky Blue? | NASA Space Place – NASA Science for Kids En seguida nos damos cuenta de que el cielo es de color azul ¿Pero alguna vez te has preguntado por qué? Muchas otras personas inteligentes, también se lo han preguntado… ¡Y les ha tomado mucho tiempo averiguar cómo y por qué! La luz del Sol se ve blanca, pero en realidad está compuesta por todos los colores del arcoíris Cuando la luz blanca pasa por un prisma, queda separada en
Why | NASA Space Place – NASA Science for Kids Why Are Planets Round? explore Why Is the Sky Blue? explore Why Does the Moon Have Craters? It's not because the Moon gets hit by meteors more often explore Why is sixteen so sweet? What kind of math would creatures with 16 fingers invent? explore Why did it take so long to Why does Saturn have rings? explore Why Does the Sun Burn Us? explore Why Do We Care About Water on Mars? Where
Explore the Electromagnetic Spectrum - NASA Space Place The Visible Light Magic Window sees the same part of the spectrum as our eyes see Visible waves are a little shorter than the size of a bacterium This is planet Jupiter If you looked through a very good telescope you would see Jupiter like this The Hubble Space Telescope in Earth orbit sees very far and very faint objects in the visible part of the spectrum, as well as the ultraviolet By
Light | NASA Space Place – NASA Science for Kids Light Why Is the Sky Blue? explore Glossary for "Sign Here!" words What Is a Laser? explore The Space Place Experiment Center do How Do Telescopes Work? Printed Product Downloads explore Glossary explore Why Does the Sun Burn Us? explore Explore the Electromagnetic Spectrum explore Make Handprint Art Using do All About the Sun explore What