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00:17
Say, a question occurred to me just the other day. Why do airliners, flying high, appear white from underneath?
At first, the answer seems obvious: it's because they're white.
But here's the thing.
During a clear day, the sky is pretty bright. It's much brighter than, say, the ground.
And that's why low-flying aircraft look dark. They're not brightly lit like the sky.
But apparently airliners are somehow exempt from this effect?
01:24
@TannerSwett: someone will probably come up with a cleverer explanation, but here's a hint: what is the sky? it's not just above the plane, but also below -- the higher you fly, the darker the sky gets (not talking U-2 here, but say FL390 on a 777), this already tells you light scattering is happening more underneath, and hence the reflection.
low flying on the other hand, is not subjected to enough scattering from below due to the proximity to the ground
and the relative dullness of terra firma
here's a FL 370 example :
via (airliners.net/photo/Cathay-Pacific-Airways/Boeing-777-367-ER/…) -- the upper bands get darker and darker
you don't see this gradual darkening on ground
discounting sunrise/sets
but the U-2 (which is still flying in the sky) provides a nice contrast as well:
more extreme, but the fading to darkness is the same
 
14 hours later…
16:00
That's actually a really good explanation @ymb1. I never explicitly addressed this in my mind, I just took it for granted that airplanes that are close look dark.
 
2 hours later…
18:15
@ymb1 So that means high altitude aircraft are above the blue, or at least most of it. Interesting
 
3 hours later…
21:09
Why is a user allowed to vote for their own question as off topic? This guy is clearly Trolling.
21:25
@abelenky From the comments it appeared he voted dupe but the majority of the votes were OT, so that became the reason.
21:35
It was still a troll question, with a 6th grade sense of humor.

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