it does backflips
This is only with light, if you shine red, blue and green ( the primary colours) at the same spot you will get white. But if you mix red, blue and yellow (the paint primary colours) you will get a brown, purpley colour.
shine the colour grey.
It is because they reflect certain wavelengths (colors) of light more readily than others. White light contains all wavelengths of light. You can see this by passing the light through a prism or by observing a rainbow. Now, if you have an object such as an orange and shine white light on it. The red and yellow will be reflected and the other colors will be absorbed. Thus, we see an orange object. Now, if you shined pure blue light on the orange it would look black, because there would be no red or yellow to reflect.
White is the presence of all colours. If you are dealing with paint or other such things (markers, crayons, etc), no combination of colour will result in white. However, if you shine red, blue, and green light (perhaps putting coloured plastic wrap on a flash light), together in the same spot, it will make a white light.
I do not know of anything that would turn sterling yellow , but if there is, it will come off after a serious polishing. Get some silver polish and shine it up- it is still yellow, it is brass or something else that looks like brass.
yellow
yellow
yellow, because green+red makes yellow in the addition of light!
The green light would be reflected, but the red light would be absorbed. ---Ryan Wang---
The green light would be reflected, but the red light would be absorbed. ---Ryan Wang---
yellow i think
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 paint absorbs blue light, which means red and green light are preferentially reflected and red and green combined appear yellow.This may be the reverse of what you learned in art class; the reason is that mixing pigmentsinvolves subtractiveprimary colors and mixing light involves additivecolors. Shine a red and a green light on the same spot and it will appear yellow.
The paint absorbs blue light, which means red and green light are preferentially reflected and red and green combined appear yellow.This may be the reverse of what you learned in art class; the reason is that mixing pigmentsinvolves subtractiveprimary colors and mixing light involves additivecolors. Shine a red and a green light on the same spot and it will appear yellow.
its Asian
Green is not a primary color, it is a combination of yellow and blue.