No. Otherwise, we would have seen new colours when light is reflected, since all the colours have different frequencies.
A filter absorbs some colours of white light and lets other colours through to create coloured light
Splitting white light into different colours is an optical phenomenon called Dispersion.
Refraction ! The light is made up of different frequencies that bend at different amounts
Because different colours have different have speeds in a prism , as refractive index depends on speed of the object therefore different colours have different refractive indexes
Traffic light colours have different shapes in order to inform the colour blind what colour the light is.
Its a spectrum
When white light shines on the CD, the light is separated into seven colours, so different colours appear on the CD.
It splits into the colours that make it up, so white light makes a rainbow, and different colours produce different results.
According to the range of frequency of emission light has different colours in different frequenies. Violet. Indigo, Blue, green,Yellow, Orange,Red are the main colours of light.
Red light plus green light equals yellow light. This is why you get yellow on a screen. Light colours mixed give you different colours to paint colours. Light Primary colours are red, blue and green but Paint Primary colours are red, blue and yellow.
Most light is a mixture of colors of the spectrum.* White light is composed of all colors. The different wavelengths of light are refracted at different angles, which separates them out into the constituent colors of the original light source. *Laser light is monochromatic.
Light appears white, however it is made up of different colours, which when put together make white light. These colours can be seen if you direct light through a prism. At the right angle the light is split up into the colours (rainbow).
The prime colours of light are green, red and blue. Any other colour is a result of a mixture of these colours. The prime colours of light are different to the prime colours in art, so don't get confused!
No. Otherwise, we would have seen new colours when light is reflected, since all the colours have different frequencies.
1.by scattering of light 2.
1.by scattering of light 2.