No colour because Yellow is a Primary Colour
It forms carbonic acid and turns yellow
yellow
it will turn into "GREEN"!
you can get a golden amber, or "gold" by mixing one part yellow with one part orange. or 3 parts yellow and one part red, since yellow and red is orange. changing the red concentration will control how much golden color you have. so half yellow and half orange, will give you the color of LA lakers jersey, or most of the yellowish team color you see in sports, which usually isn't yellow. also the color of a cars turn signals which are called amber.
chemicalz does its
yellow
Yellow, blue and red are primary colors. They can't be changed except into secondary colors by mixing one with another. The secondary colors are green, orange and violet.
They make brown. Red and yellow make orange, which is complimentary to blue. When complimentary colors are mixed they turn brown. Other complimentary colors and purlple (blue and red) and yellow, and green (blue and yellow) and red. I hope this helped.
It forms carbonic acid and turns yellow
No. Diamonds do not change color. Their colors are decided before they're dug up.
if you mean what color it would turn it would be brown
They can be several colors, depending on the species. Most are green when growing, and turn yellow/green when ripe. The inside of a ripe pineapple is yellow.
Because when the Chlorophyll molecules - that gives leaves their Green color - disintegrate they can't make the plant Green anymore - Yellow is the next color to appear and in turn vanish to make way for the Red colors.
red, orange, and yellow but some leaves die and turn brown......or some just stay green
Only yellow.
The color depends on when the pepper was picked. Peppers that haven't ripened are green, then they turn yellow, and finally red when fully ripened.
Goldfish don't always stay the same color. As a goldfish ages, it can turn a variety of colors, like orange or yellow or white, including patches or spots of color as well.Common household goldfish tend to change colors throughout their lives. White, orange, and yellow color changes, in whole or in part, are very common.