Moonlight has a color temperature of 4100K, while sunlight has a higher color temperature of more than 5000K. But objects illuminated by moonlight don't look yellower to the eye. They look bluer.
This holds for indoor scenes (like my hall) and for outdoor. I find it counter. The color temperature of moonlight is around 4100 Kelvin, giving it a cool bluish.
What color temperature is night? The 5500 K average daylight color spectrum varies during different parts of the day. In the early morning and late evening, the color temperature will fall to 5000 K and lower causing color shifts in the emulsion resulting in warmer (redder) color rendering. The color temperature of the light source, measured in Kelvin, is determined by the temperature of the blackbody located on the color chart in the same place as the radiation source under consideration.
In both images, the moon has a warm, white glow, around 4000k, and this is typically the color temperature of the light the moon reflects from the sun. However, in film and art, moonlight is often blue. Even our general perception leads us to believe moonlight is blue.
Image via Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban (Warner Brothers). Color temperature is a parameter describing the color of a visible light source by comparing it to the color of light emitted by an idealized opaque, non. What color is the moonlight? And does it's color temperature change along the day/night like the sun? By "What color is the moonlight" I need the hex code of the color, or it's color tempreture if it constant.
The temperature on the moon can vary drastically between lunar day and night time. Moonlight Kelvin refers to the color temperature of moonlight, which is typically around 4100 Kelvin. This is significant because it is a cool, bluish light that can affect our perception of.
The color temperature used for the moon, or any night photo, is tricky, and just takes a little playing around. For this image, I set the color temperature to 4,623, because I thought it just looked right.