I am not exactly sure, but red and green paint together make brown.
Yellow. The light is 'additive' and not 'subtractive' like printed inks.
If the screen is actually white, it will absorb all light and appear black to your eye. If the screen appears white in normal light, all light will be reflected resulting in the combination of green and red (brown/yellow).
The white screen will appear yellow because when red light and green light shine on a white surface, they combine to create yellow light. This is because red and green are complementary colors that combine to create yellow.
black since the object is blue, it reflects only blue light thus, shining red and green lights on it will only cause the object to absorb the two colors and it will result to the appearance of the object as black
Light does not have a specific color based on the thermometer's location. The color of light is determined by its wavelength, which is emitted by the light source. The thermometer's location does not affect the color of the light.
The 'pixels' on a TV screen are red, blue, and green.
light source
In light, yellow is not a primary color. In painting, green is not a primary color. Paint is more of an exception, as light really is the source of all color.
The complementary color of green light is magenta.
The complementary color of light green is pink.
light green
The little light will turn from from an "orange-ish" color to a green.