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Spectral_color


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The CIE xy chromaticity diagram. The spectral colors are the horseshoe shape curve on the outside. All other colors are not spectral: the bottom straight line is the line of purples, while the interior are unsaturated colors: a mixture of a spectral color and a grayscale color.

A spectral color is a color that is evoked by the visible spectrum; every wavelength of light is perceived as a different spectral color, in a continuous spectrum.

The spectrum is often divided up into named colors, though any division is somewhat arbitrary: the spectrum is continuous. Traditional colors include: red, orange, yellow, green, blue, violet.

Indigo is often omitted as simply a shade of blue/violet, and cyan was not included historically. The first division was by Newton, in his color wheel, and he used Red, Orange, Yellow, Green, Blue, Violet; a mnemonic is ROYGBV.

Among some of the colors that are not spectral colors are:

  • Grayscale colors, such as White, Silver, Gray, and Black
  • Any color obtained by mixing a grayscale color and a spectral color, such as brown - mixture of yellow and black obtained contrast.
  • Purple (similarly, magenta), which is a mixture of Blue and red

The visible spectrum as a combination of spectral colors

Visible light is a blend of (normally) all spectral colors, leading to a common understanding of visible light as "white"; however, depending upon the specific light source, the relative intensity of each color varies. This phenomenon explains why there exists a tinge of color perceived in certain light sources themselves. For example, high pressure sodium and some fluorescent sources have an off-white color. This phenomenon is important in evaluating the effects of light upon humans from light sources that are not matched well to the spectrum of natural sunlight. The study of these health effects is dealt with in the field of over-illumination. red green and violet are the primary colors.

See also

This color-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from Wikipedia


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