pek u imo mama
II- LUMINUS
Kniel xD
sorry hahaha
wlang sagot useless pla to
pek u imo mama II- LUMINUS Kniel xD sorry hahaha
pek u imo mama II- LUMINUS Kniel xD sorry hahaha
White light is composed of a spectrum of colors because when white light passes through a prism, it is separated into different wavelengths, each corresponding to a different color. Sir Isaac Newton discovered this in the 17th century, showing that visible light is made up of seven colors: red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet, which collectively form the rainbow spectrum.
white!
It's not "considered"...it IS the composition of all colors! Light works differently than paint. When you add more and more colors of paint together, you get black paint. When you add more and more colors of light, you get what we call "white" light. It's also referred to as color addition.
White light is a composition of many more colors than seven. The presence in white light if any color at all can be demonstrated as follows: -- Mix a chemical dye that absorbs every color of light except the one you want to detect. Saturate a clear, transparent plastic sheet with the dye, and sandwich the sheet between clear layers of glass, forming what is known as an optical "filter". -- Direct a beam of white light at one side of the filter. Recall that the chemical dye absorbs every color of light except for the narrow band of wavelength which it has been designed to pass. -- Observe that light with the selected wavelength ("color") shines forth from the other side of the filter, demonstrating that it was present in the white light. Such filters can actually be constructed, with very narrow "passband".
white
Piet Mondrian primarily used white, black, and the primary colors red, yellow, and blue in Composition No. 2. He believed that these colors represented the fundamental elements of art and the universe.
The colors are Red White and Blue. There are seven red stripes and six white stripes, and white stars on a field of blue.
When all seven colors of the spectrum combine together, they create white light. This is because white light is a combination of all the colors in the visible spectrum.
No, not all stars are white in color. Stars can appear in different colors such as red, blue, yellow, and white, depending on their temperature and composition.