
Originally Posted by
hhEb09'1

Originally Posted by
Kesh
Look at it when it's climbing or on its way down, it looks more yellow.
Yeah, usually the question relates to how it looks from down here, under the atmosphere etc.
George is trying to answer the question from a vantage point
above the atmosphere.
Thanks 371W :wink: I did not clairifiy it properly, though usually I do. Most of the astronomy sites address the sun's color as a they would a star being observed from space. We loose nearly all the violet and considerable amounts of blue and green due to our atmosphere. The scattering producing the blue sky is only part of the loss. The difference in spectrum is quite interesting. Here is a rough graph I did....

[edit- needs an AM2 graph]Here is the spectrum after the atmosphere bleaches out some of the colors...


Originally Posted by
hhEb09'1
Probably, the main thing influencing the answer is, when you can look at it without some sort of pain (when it's lower, through a haze), it does look yellow.
Do you really see it as yellow? I see it as white. I spread my fingers and oscillate both hands to reduce the pain to get white. It doesn't appear yellow till it gets close to the horizon on non-dusty days.
We know time flies, we just can't see its wings.