The addition of blue and red light beams give magenta light.
the color of Mrs. Claus eyes are light blue
reflected or transmitted
in blue light a apple is black !
... reflected, and perceived by passersby.
Blue light therapy is a light that helps fight bacteria fore example mrsa,acne, and ect....
no. Answer: If you mix red, green and blue light, that's what you get - white light. An interesting observation can be made by overlapping beams of the above colours.
Light actually works differently than paint, for example. Yellow light is made up of green and red light, so if you added blue light into the mix, you'd get...white light. This depends on the intensity of the two light beams, so you could get a yellow hued white light or a blue hued white light, as well.
When light passes through a prism, it is refracted slightly and separated into seven individual beams of coloured light - red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo and violet.
When light passes through a prism, it is refracted slightly and separated into seven individual beams of coloured light - red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo and violet.
Strictly speaking, the primary colours for paint, ink, etc are yellow, magenta (not red) and cyan (not blue), as you will see if you lok at a computer printer. If you are mixing beams of light, then red, blue, and green would make white light, as happens in a TV or computer monitor.
You may be mistaken it for the DDL's (Daytime Driving Lights) They come on while in gear... High beams have a BLUE light on the dash, while, the DDL's have a GREEN light.
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it makes a type of blue that is light " light" blue
it makes a type of blue that is light " light" blue
Light blue.
You pull your turn signal lever towards you, and you should hear a click. Make sure your truck is on. When you have done that you will see a blue light in the middle of your speedometer and RPM gauge. It is a picture of a light with beams coming off the light. That is how you know that you have turned them on.
It's all very complicated. It begins with narrow beams of light, each colored either red, green or blue (known as RGB). These narrow beams are sent from the back of the vaccuum sealed picture tube toward the larger front, where they encounter a thick layer of carbon. This carbon keeps the TV tube from acting like a big flashlight. The spot where the beam of light hits the carbon layer becomes a small dot of light, whcich when viewed from a few inches away, become SpongeBob Squarepants or Brian Griffin. So there you have it: vaccuum tube, light, carbon, and magnets to bend the beams of light. Pretty simple, eh?