SCIENCE
Use our resources to better understand the science of sunsets.

Photograph by Kimberly Dumke, National Geographic
Discussion Ideas
- Read the Nat Geo News article, or read our short media spotlight “Orange Sunset, Emerald Isle.” They explain the same phenomenon. What two ingredients make a beautiful orange sunset?
- 1. The sun! Our superstar is the not-so-secret ingredient in every sunset and sunrise.
- 2. Earth’s atmosphere! This thin blue line is what filters and reflects light. In space, there is no orange-colored sky. (I love that image!!!)
- Look at the photo above, or look at the same photo on our website. Why do you think the sky in the top of the photo is blue, while the sky near the horizon is orange? (Read through “Orange Sunset, Emerald Isle” or the Nat Geo News article for clues.)
- Oxygen and nitrogen, the “two main molecules in air preferentially scatter the shortest wavelengths, which are blues and purples,” according to the meteorologist interviewed in the Nat Geo News article. “Basically, that’s why the daytime sky is blue.””As the sun rises and sets, however,” according to our media spotlight, “its light passes through much more of Earth’s atmosphere before reaching our eyes. Blue and violet light are scattered away. Only the long, reddish wavelengths can go the distance.”