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I've found several answers to the question of why the sky is blue.
Basically the title. Elaborate however you want...

Dreylina
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  • if you google this you get 1,6 billion hits,what more do you want? – trond hansen Jul 08 '18 at 09:01
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    In short: the scattering of light. Ozone offers some protections against UV light. – Fred Jul 08 '18 at 09:22
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    I'm voting to close this question as off-topic due to insufficient research. – David Hammen Jul 08 '18 at 21:09
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    I think the reason for the question is that Google gives some wrong results (Ozone layer) as well as the right one. It's clearly earth science, and I encourage somebody to put time into a good canonical answer. – Semidiurnal Simon Jul 09 '18 at 07:09
  • Answered at https://earthscience.stackexchange.com/questions/3063/is-the-color-of-the-sky-the-same-everywhere-on-earth/3068 – jeffronicus Jul 09 '18 at 19:11
  • This isn't really a duplicate - it just happens to share an answer with a different question. I think this site should have a "Why is the sky blue?" question with a good answer, and I'm hoping somebody will write one (I might take a shot in a day or two when I have time, if there's nothing by then) – Semidiurnal Simon Jul 10 '18 at 14:53

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