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primary light colors are the mixed of red green and blue and pigment is solid colors
Red, green, and blue light can be mixed in different proportions to produce any other color of light. No other combinations of light can be mixed to make red, green, or blue light so they are considered primary colors. Yellow for A+ Users
reb,blue,yellow << primary colours
i think one is substractive (the mixed colors are lighter) and the other is aditive (darker)
None. Yellow is a "primary" color, along with red and blue. These three colors may be mixed together, two at a time, to produce orange, green, and purple...the "secondary" colors. All three, mixed together, produce brown.
primary light colors are the mixed of red green and blue and pigment is solid colors
Red, green, and blue light can be mixed in different proportions to produce any other color of light. No other combinations of light can be mixed to make red, green, or blue light so they are considered primary colors. Yellow for A+ Users
reb,blue,yellow << primary colours
White light contains all other colours of light mixed together. So when the primary colours, red, green and blue light are mixed together, they will produce a white light.
The are only one color and that is black put together
i think one is substractive (the mixed colors are lighter) and the other is aditive (darker)
They form white light.
Red, Blue and Green are the three primary colors of our white light.Above mentioned colors can be mixed differently to get shades of all the colors in visible spectrum.White light is seen all the incident light is reflected from the source.
None. Yellow is a "primary" color, along with red and blue. These three colors may be mixed together, two at a time, to produce orange, green, and purple...the "secondary" colors. All three, mixed together, produce brown.
It depends on whether you are talking about colors of light (emission) or paint (absorption). The three primary colors of light are red, blue, and green. Mixed together, they make white. The three primary colors of paint are red, blue, and yellow. Mixed together, they make black.
You would get white, because it is like the light beams are going through a crystal. The idea encapsulated here is that white light, when sent through a prism, is broken up into its constituent colors. When you reverse the process and add together the light that is broken up by a prism, the result is white light. ___________________________________________ When the primary colors of light are mixed, the outcome is white light. I don't know exactly why this happens, but I'm guessing this: You know how white light is really composed of all the colors of the rainbow? When you mix all the primary colors of the rainbow together, you get white light.
All of the primary colors mixed together would create brown.