Why is the sky
blue?

Sunlight is made up of all the colors of the rainbow:
red, orange,
yellow, green,
blue, and violet.
The gas molecules in the atmosphere interact with the sunlight
before the light reaches our eyes.
The gas molecules in the atmosphere scatter the higher-energy
(high frequency) blue portion of the
sunlight more than they scatter the lower-energy
red portion of the sunlight (this is
called Raleigh scattering, named for the physicist Lord John
Rayleigh). The Sun appears reddish-yellow and the sky surrounding
the Sun is colored by the scattered blue waves.
When the Sun is lower in the horizon (near sunrise or sunset),
the sunlight must travel through a greater thickness of atmosphere
than it does when it is overhead, and even more light is scattered
(not just blue, but also green, yellow, and orange) before the light
reaches your eyes. This makes the sun look much redder.
Caution: Never stare directly at the Sun.