Indigo is a sort of mix between blue and violet. If you mix blue and violet on the color palette you get it.
Indigo is also a plant with green leaves and a white flower that is cone shaped here you can find many images of those plants.
Indigo is 270° hue on the color wheel, between blue and pink (magenta). It's not very blue at all. If you look at the diffraction pattern on a CD, you'll see indigo is quite wide and briht, whereas blue is narrow and dim, and shows it corresponds to your short-wavelength cone. Therefore, indigo (which I'll call "loor") is a primary color after red and green, and blue is not but a big mistake.
The rainbow, in order, goes like this:
- Red
- Orange
- Yellow
- Green
- Blue
- Indigo
- Violet
0.jpg
Indigo isn't a color in the spectrum anymore. I still don't understand why though.
Like a reflection of many bright colours. Red, purple, green, yellow, orange.
It depends on the precise characteristics of the filter. If you really want to know, find one and go hunting rainbows, but I suspect you'll be disappointed in the result.
Nothing comes through. A red light emits no blue light, and a blue filter allows only blue light to pass ... that's why when you look at it, you say to yourself "Hey! That filter looks blue. I'll call it a 'blue filter'."
It depends on what kind of filter, e.g. a blue filter absorbs everything except blue light, so only blue light comes out, which is why the filter looks blue, and is referred to as a "blue filter".
Red or blue. The reason a red filter looks and is red, is because only red light comes through it, and the same can be said about a blue filter allowing only blue light through. Other colors are absorbed by the dyes in the filter. If white light enters a red filter, then red light comes out, and the same goes for blue.
I'm guessing it was probably the GREEN light, and that somehow it had something to do with why the filter was named a "GREEN" filter, and why when you looked at it, it looked GREEN.
First, let's understand why you call that device a 'cyan filter'? Was it invented by the famous Austrian Physicist Professor Cyril Cyan? Is it marketed and distributed in the US by the Cyan Filterwerks? Or is it because when you look at it, it looks the color of cyan? Could that be because whatever color of light enters one side of the filter, the only color of light that's not absorbed by the filter and remains to come out the other side is cyan light? In that case, whenever cyan light is present in the incident light ... like if it's 'white' light ... then the cyan comes out the other side and the filter looks cyan. And if there's no cyan in the incident light, then all of it is absorbed in the dyes in the filter, and the other side of the filter appears very dark, or black.
A rainbow can form when it rains. It consists of seven different colors. The colors are red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo and violet.
Rainbow Ponyta looks like a rainbow
The sky looks indigo or blue due too light splitting in the nitrogen particles in the atmosphere.
The sky looks indigo or blue due too light splitting in the nitrogen particles in the atmosphere.
The reason we call a blue filter a "blue filter" is that it looks blue. The reason it looks blue is that blue light is the only kind of light that can go all the way through it. Any other color of light gets absorbed in the dyes between the layers of the filter, and never comes out the other side. If you shine red light at one side of a blue filter, the other side of the filter looks dark, as if nothing is shining through it. And if you look at a 'red' sweater through a blue filter, the sweater looks black.
it looks like this 1,2,3,4,9,12,18,36
the filter transmits red light and absorbs other colors.
It looks like burgundy kinda
Nothing comes through. A red light emits no blue light, and a blue filter allows only blue light to pass ... that's why when you look at it, you say to yourself "Hey! That filter looks blue. I'll call it a 'blue filter'."
It depends on what kind of filter, e.g. a blue filter absorbs everything except blue light, so only blue light comes out, which is why the filter looks blue, and is referred to as a "blue filter".
my house looks awsome its rainbow
The fuel filter in the 2000 Kia Sportage looks like a cylinder with a domed top. There are two lines attached at each end of the filter to facilitate the passage of fuel through the filter.