chaos syndrome wrote:So the Struve-light appears white but the relative intensities of different colours are different to Sol-light.
This is complicated by something called "physiological colour constancy", in which your brain tunes colours to partially compensate for the spectral distribution - so white still looks white, although with a bit of concentration it's evident that the white you see under incandescent light is a yellower white than the white you see under flourescent light. But your brain doesn't compensate for the relative brightness of various coloured patches seen next to each other in a biased spectrum: so if you were looking down on the Struve planet I'm predicting the clouds would look a bright (but slightly yellowish) white, orange deserts would also appear very bright, green vegetation would be so dark in comparison as to appear black, and the oceans would also be very dark in shade (but since they're intrinsically more reflective than vegetation, they'd maybe look dark blue). I've wondered how we could do this automatically in Celestia, but the colour-constancy thing has always thrown me ... we don't want to simply adjust the RGB channels, or we'll throw off the central white balance.
chaos syndrome wrote:Would the sky be a much darker blue on a planet in the Struve system even if it received the same intensity of visible light
Gillett suggests the sky might be red, but I think he's forgotten the inverse wavelength-to-the-four scaling of Rayleigh scattering - which means blue light is scattered sixteen time more effectively than red. That would partially or completely compensate for the spectral slope of the red star, so I'd guess you'd see a nice continuous spectrum that looked white.
(Hmmm, those oceans are beginning to look grey, aren't they? Depends on how much of the blue we see from space is reflected sky colour, and how much is light that has entered the water and been reflected out again from the depths - my recollection is that the latter is the main contributor when you look straight down on water, and the latter when you look at it on the diagonal.)
For blue stars the spectral slope and the Rayleigh bias will reinforce each other, so you'll see a more blue sky than you do on Earth - I'd suggest a even touch of violet, but our eyes are extremely insensitive to violet, so I don't know.
Grant