Home
Weather Dublin
WeatherRadar
RainfallRadar
TemperatureRadar
WindRadar
LightningRadar
Weather News
Editor's Pick
Discover the app
Weather widget
Contact us
Apps
    Home / Editor's Pick /

    Twilight skies: What causes the explosion of colours?

16:00
28 January 2023

Twilight skies
What causes the explosion of colours?

twilight

As soon as the sun goes down, sunlight is by no means over. Twilight offers an explosion of colours in the sky for us to marvel at.

Twilight is the transitional period between day and night. In the evening it is called dusk, in the morning, dawn. Air molecules, aerosols and cloud droplets trigger the blaze of colour in the sky that often accompanies twilight.

How is twilight formed?

Tiny particles in the atmosphere are responsible for the colours lighting up the sky. When the sun is only slightly above the horizon, light takes a longer path through the atmosphere, than when the sun is higher up.

The influence of air molecules and aerosols, such as dust, increases the closer the sun is to the horizon. As shorter wavelengths (blue tones) are scattered more strongly, the sky turns a yellowish-red.

After sunset, the colours become even more intense because the low angle of the sun also illuminates the clouds.

Long after sunset, when the first stars twinkle, the sky turns deep blue. Although all the sun's rays have travelled a long way through the atmosphere, the blue colour components dominate once again.

This blue is a result of the stratospheric ozone layer at an altitude of 20 to 30 kilometres. Here, ozone molecules absorb the orange part of the light.

The selective absorption shifts the colours to the shorter wavelengths, i.e. to blue. When the sun is low, the ozone layer acts like a blue colour filter and we can see it with the naked eye.

Keep an eye out for our tips coming soon on how to photograph at twilight!

Weather & Radar editorial team
More on the topic
How to sleep better in warmer weather. Tropical nights ahead. . . Tuesday 23 June 2026
Person sitting on the floor indoors beside a running electric fan, cooling down in a sunlit room during hot weather, with sunlight streaming through a window.
Tuesday 23 June 2026

Tropical nights ahead

How to sleep better in warmer weather
50 years since historic 1976 heatwave. Three-month hot spell. . . Tuesday 23 June 2026
Black-and-white photograph from the 1976 UK heatwave showing a crowded outdoor swimming area packed with people bathing, wading, and sitting along the water's edge during extreme summer heat.
Tuesday 23 June 2026

Three-month hot spell

50 years since historic 1976 heatwave
Schools closed and more heat disruption. Red warnings now live. . . Wednesday 24 June 2026
Split image showing a person using a sun umbrella near the Elizabeth Tower in London on the left and a temperature map of England on the right with widespread red heat, temperatures reaching 35°C near London, and a large thermometer icon.
Wednesday 24 June 2026

Red warnings now live

Schools closed and more heat disruption
All weather news
This might also interest you
New records for England and Wales. Broken again tomorrow?. . . Thursday 25 June 2026
Temperature map of southwest Britain on 25.06 showing extreme heat across southern Wales and southwest England, with Bute Park in Cardiff highlighted at 34.2°C and Yeovilton at 36.4°C amid widespread deep red heat zones.
Thursday 25 June 2026

Broken again tomorrow?

New records for England and Wales
Turbulent weather in the Canary Islands. Storm and rain. . . Friday 12 December 2025
Weather graphic showing rain and wind fields over the Canary Islands and a central warning symbol.
Friday 12 December 2025

Storm and rain

Turbulent weather in the Canary Islands
Storm Benjamin impacts the UK. Warnings active. . . Wednesday 22 October 2025
Split weather map showing UK wind speeds in orange-red shades up to 40 mph on the left and warning levels in green-yellow on the right, with a central wind warning sign.
Wednesday 22 October 2025

Warnings active

Storm Benjamin impacts the UK
All articles
Weather & Radar

Weather & Radar is also available on

Google Play StoreApp Store

Company

Contact us Privacy Policy Legal info Accessibility statement

Services

Uploader

Socials

facebooktwitteryouTubelinkList