Lakes and oceans appear cyan for several reasons. One is that the surface of the water reflects the
color of the sky, which ranges from cyan to light
azure. It is a common misconception that this reflection is the sole reason bodies of water appear cyan, though it can contribute. This contribution usually makes the body of water appear more a shade of azure rather than cyan depending on how bright the sky is. Water in swimming pools with white-painted sides and bottom will appear cyan, even in indoor pools where there is no sky to be reflected. The deeper the pool, the more intense the cyan color becomes. Some of the light hitting the surface of the ocean is reflected but most of it penetrates the water surface, interacting with water molecules and other substances in the water. Water molecules can vibrate in three different modes when they interact with light. The red, orange, and yellow wavelengths of light are
absorbed so the remaining light seen is composed of green, cyan, and blue wavelengths. This is the main reason the
ocean's color is cyan. The relative contribution of reflected skylight and the light scattered back from the depths is strongly dependent on observation angle.
Scattering from suspended particles also plays an important role in the color of lakes and oceans, causing the water to look greener or bluer in different areas. A few tens of meters of water will absorb all light, so without scattering, all bodies of water would appear black. Because most lakes and oceans contain suspended living matter and mineral particles, light from above is scattered and some of it is reflected upwards. Scattering from suspended particles would normally give a white color, as with snow, but because the light first passes through many meters of cyan-colored liquid, the scattered light appears cyan. In extremely pure water—as is found in mountain lakes, where scattering from particles is very low—the scattering from water molecules themselves also contributes a cyan color.
Diffuse sky radiation due to
Rayleigh scattering in the atmosphere along one's line of sight gives distant objects a cyan or light
azure tint. This is most commonly noticed with distant mountains, but also contributes to the cyanness of the ocean in the distance. File:Ireland-AtlanticOceanwithAranIsland.jpg|Large bodies of water such as oceans manifest water's inherent blue color. File:Gulf of Mexico (MODIS 2018-10-19).jpg|From space, oceans appear to have a very rich, deep shade of blue. This is an image taken by the
MODIS instruments of the
Gulf of Mexico. File:Ocean color 2007.jpg|The hue of the reflected sky contributes to the perceived azure color of water, but most of the cyan color comes from the intrinsic color of water
scattered back up to the surface by small suspended particles. ==Color of glaciers==