sophiecentaur
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voko said:And I cannot see the relevance of this argument with respect to the question "why is our Sun yellow". This question is about our visual perception of the Sun, not of its light that we observe indirectly.
On a very subjective, arm waving, level, of course the Sun is white and so are a lot of other light emitting objects we see, from reddish, through yellowish, through neutral, right out to blueish. But the only definition of neutral white is in the context of an illuminant (for reasons I have given several times already). This is because no one actually looks at the Sun; it is strictly a minority occupation (do you actually do it for more than a second?). The one rock solid definition of a white, involving the Sun refers to a white card in sunlight. Can you quote any reference that tells us otherwise? Look at the CIE Colour diagram with the positions of the various 'standard' illuminants / white points marked on it. This is not just irrelevant raving on my part. It's of great importance to people whose business is Colour. Things have got a lot better these days but still, if you look at a wall of different TVs in a shop, you will see a whole range of whites across all the sets. If we were not sensitive to white point, we wouldn't notice this spread in performance and colour TV would be easier to engineer.
The sunlight we stand out in is composed of light directly from the Sun and also light from the blue sky. I cannot understand how you seem not understand that. This must lead to the conclusion that the Sun itself is not supplying white light to your white card. Ergo the Sun is supplying light that is yellowish and mixes with blue to produce white, when diffused. Two colours can't be identical if one of them had other wavelengths added to it - can they?