Why Does the Sun Look Yellow When Paper Looks White?

In summary: So we do see the paper as white because the sunlight is shining through it, but the paper is not as bright as the sunlight and it is not as bright as the paper would be in direct sunlight. And for those who think that the colors of the spectrum are red, orange, yellow, green, blue, and violet, you are wrong. That is the physicist's and mathematician's spectrum. The real spectrum is: red, yellow, green, blue, and violet. All the other colors are mixtures of some or all of those. But I won't bore you with the detailsIn summary, the conversation discusses the difference in color perception between sunlight and a piece of paper when held up to sunlight. While sunlight appears yellow,
  • #1
Tyger
398
0
When you hold a piece of paper up to sunlight it looks white. But when we look at the Sun it looks yellow. Who's first with the answer?
 
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  • #2
Originally posted by Tyger
When you hold a piece of paper up to sunlight it looks white. But when we look at the Sun it looks yellow. Who's first with the answer?

Could it be because a piece of paper is made out of
a whole bunch of stuff so we get the combined white color ?
 
  • #3
the yellow light is being reflected away from your eyes so you don't see it.
 
  • #4
I am not sure, but i guess that :
White color is an equal 'mix' of all the 7 colors of the rainbow.
The sun does not emit an equal mix, it emits more yellow than other colors (but eventually it emits all colors).
So you can say that the sun light emits white+yellow, and your paper seems to reflect yellow away (like what sheldon said), so only white reaches ur eye.
 
  • #5
Originally posted by Tyger
When you hold a piece of paper up to sunlight it looks white. But when we look at the Sun it looks yellow. Who's first with the answer?

I don't recall ever looking at the Sun and seeing yellow. The light from the Sun has a spectrum which is very much like that of a black body at a temperature of about 5,800 Kelvin. The peak of the plot of intensity vs. wavelength shows a peak aroung the middle of the visible spectrum and is about constant throughout the visble spectrum with the max at about yellow. But it's not that different. The fact that aa piece of paper looks white is a demonstration of that fact since a white piece of paper reflects all colors. Take the "white" piece of paper and place it under Sunlight - it looks white. Now place it under a incandescant lamp - it looks yellow.

Pmb
 
  • #6
Originally posted by Tyger
When you hold a piece of paper up to sunlight it looks white. But when we look at the Sun it looks yellow. Who's first with the answer?

the color the sun looks probably depends
on the background you see it against

standing on moon, sun against a black sky-----looks white

against a blue sky-----yellow (Y and B are complementary colors)

coming thru cloud or fog it would be against a neutral gray or white background-----would look white


the light, separated out from any background effects, would
analyze out to be pure white

people's color sense has contrast with background built in
so complementary colors have something to do with how
colors look---there could even be an evolutionary reason
for this, some kind of foodgathering or survival thing---never
thought about it
 
  • #7
There've been enough guesses on this one

that I think an answer is in order. I was going to post this earlier but someone put up a thread about why the sky was blue, and that was too much of a hint. But that is why, the sun looks yellow because the blue light is scattered out before it hits our eyes. But when we hold a piece of paper up to the sky, it recives the scattered blue light as well as the yellower sunlight. If you put the same piece of paper in the shade it will have a distinct blue cast. Likewise if you shield it from skylight but let the sunlight hit it, it will look yellowish.
 
  • #8
But isn't lamda max for 5800 K in between yellow and green? And due to scattering and also that our eyes are more sensitive to yellow, that we then perceive the sun as yellow?

And to answer the original question, you are seeing light shinig through the paper.

P.S. Tyger we are waiting for you to go on the physics Q&A game
 
  • #9
Originally posted by On Radioactive Waves
But isn't lamda max for 5800 K in between yellow and green? And due to scattering and also that our eyes are more sensitive to yellow, that we then perceive the sun as yellow?

And to answer the original question, you are seeing light shinig through the paper.

P.S. Tyger we are waiting for you to go on the physics Q&A game

Don't forget that our eyes and brain compensate for a lot of factors. That is one reason many people have trouble learning photography, they don't make allowance for the camera's stupidity in that respect. So our eyes see sunlight as white, even though it doesn't fit the abstract definition of "white light".
 

1. Why does the sun appear yellow?

The sun appears yellow because of its temperature. The surface of the sun has a temperature of about 5,500 degrees Celsius, which emits light in the visible spectrum. This light appears yellow to our eyes.

2. Why does paper appear white?

Paper appears white because it reflects all visible light wavelengths equally. This means that the light that hits the paper is not absorbed, but instead bounces off and reaches our eyes, making the paper appear white.

3. If the sun's light is white, why does it appear yellow?

Although the sun's light contains all visible wavelengths, our atmosphere scatters the shorter blue wavelengths more than the longer red wavelengths. This makes the sun appear more yellow to our eyes, especially when it is lower on the horizon.

4. Is there a scientific reason for why the sun appears yellow and not another color?

Yes, the color of the sun is determined by its temperature and the composition of its atmosphere. The high temperature of the sun's surface emits yellow light, and the scattering of light in our atmosphere makes it appear more yellow than other colors.

5. Can the sun's color change?

The color of the sun may appear to change throughout the day due to the angle of the sun's light passing through the atmosphere. It also appears more yellow during sunrise and sunset due to the longer path the sunlight has to travel through the atmosphere. However, the sun's actual color remains the same.

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