the color of the magazine picture looks different because the colors of the picture aren't solid colors. They are colors with an array of black dots. It just looks solid because the dots are so tiny, you can't see them with the naked eye.
Magazines actually have tiny black dots throughout the picture, the dots are just too small to see with the naked eye. So when you use the microscope, the picture is magnified, allowing you to see what you normally can't, which is the black dots.
Monochrome.
There different colors emitted
Different elements have different emission spectra, meaning that if the electrons in an atom are excited, they will release that energy in different color of light. The flame color depends on the elements in the compound.
connecting different colors with different ideas.
Magazines actually have tiny black dots throughout the picture, the dots are just too small to see with the naked eye. So when you use the microscope, the picture is magnified, allowing you to see what you normally can't, which is the black dots.
Usually printed colors are not solid colors but rather a series of closely grouped dots of several colors. What you are seeing could be just a dot of the color matrix instead of the whole. Read more: Why_does_ONE_color_of_a_magazine_picture_look_different_when_you_look_at_it_under_a_microscope
You should look at anything interesting under a microscope! I once got a small toy microscope at a book fair. I looked at many things but the thing that interested me the most was the picture in a book. If you look at a color in a picture in a book you will see that it's not yellow (or any color) that your looking at! It's really millions and millions of different colors! It's sooo... AWESOME!!! :-)
ur face loser
There are really small black dots that are uniformly throughout the colored picture of a magazine. These dots are invisible to the naked eye, but can be magnified and viewed by a microscope.
you first draw the picture and then you use different colored dots to color your picture. For more info look up pointillism
tan
The first television is very different from the ones we have now because of the depth , picture quality , and color.
Pictures aren't measured in G's. They're measured in Bytes and Bits. To answer your question, it depends on how compressed the file can get. A picture in a solid color will have a better compression than a picture with 20 people, all with different color clothes.
Well, There is no exact color because on a microscope it is only gray.
Chiaroscuro is a monochrome picture made by using several different shades of the same color.
Color Splash?