A bright folk-pop singalong that explains why the sky looks blue: tiny wavelengths scatter through the air, with a chorus-ready twist about violet light and how our eyes see color.
Why Is the Sky Blue? (Tiny Waves)
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A bright 90-second folk-pop singalong about the hidden dance between sunlight and air. The song answers a classic question: blue and violet wavelengths scatter more through the atmosphere, but the sky looks blue because our eyes favor blue and some violet is absorbed.
[Intro]
Why, why, why is the sky so blue?
Hum it once and the answer sings back to you.
[Verse 1]
Sunlight walks in wearing every shade,
Red to violet in a bright parade.
Air looks empty, but it is a crowd,
Tiny gas molecules dancing around.
[Pre-Chorus]
Long red waves keep rolling through,
Short little waves get knocked askew.
They bounce and scatter from side to side,
Painting daylight wide.
[Chorus]
Blue gets tossed around, all over town,
Tiny waves turn the whole sky blue.
But actually violet scatters too,
Our eyes pick blue, so blue shines through.
Blue gets tossed around, all over town,
That is why the noon sky sings blue.
[Verse 2]
At sunset light takes the long way home,
More air to cross, more space to roam.
Blue gets scattered out of the line,
Red and gold step into shine.
[Bridge]
So the color is not painted on high,
It is sunlight bumping through the sky.
[Final Chorus]
Blue gets tossed around, all over town,
Tiny waves turn the whole sky blue.
But actually violet scatters too,
Our eyes pick blue, so blue shines through.
Blue gets tossed around, all over town,
Now you know why the sky sings blue.
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