On which altitude does the heaven turns in black?

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The discussion centers on the altitude at which the sky appears black, particularly from an airplane. Test pilots report that the sky looks black at around 100,000 feet, while Concorde passengers noted it at 60,000 feet. The transition to a darker sky is gradual, with significant atmospheric pressure changes noted at these altitudes. By 70,000 feet, the sky is very dark, becoming nearly black by 100,000 feet. The conversation emphasizes that there isn't a precise altitude for this transition, but rather a range where the sky darkens significantly.
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Hi!
Just got a question from my 6 years old nephew who just traveled in an aeroplane for the first time. He wonders where (which altitude) the heaven turns in black? Someone who knows?
 
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I don't have any specific numbers, but the transition is gradual (not sudden) as you go higher.
 
Test pilots unanimously assert the sky appears black at 100,000 feet. Concorde passengers have claimed the sky appears black at 60,000 feet. The air pressure at 60,000 feet is about 1 lb/in^2, at 100,000 feet it is 0.162 lbs/in^2, at 250,000 feet it is 0.000 lbs/in^2. Obviously, the sky is indisputably black when atmospheric pressure reaches 0.000.
 
Thanks for your answers!
 
While there's no point at which the sky turns black, you could ask when has it turned black by (in the same sense that you can't say exactly when it gets dark at night, but you could say that it will happen sometime before, e.g., 9pm. At around 70,000ft it will be very dark, and it will be more or less black by 100,000ft.

Edit: Oops, looks like Chronos snuck in while I was typing. Though, Chronos, maybe I'm misremembering but I thought the Concorde passengers said it looked black if they looked up out of their windows. So, not necessarily ambient blackness.
 
Nickek: That's a very bright question. You're nephew's one smart guy. :-)
 
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