Green
Aurora is most commonly associated with shifting colors in the sky, commonly seen as pink, green, blue, or purple.
Green is the commonest color in the Aurora Borealis as green is produced when charged particles from the sun collide with atoms of oxygen at a high level. The Aurora over Greenland would sometimes show colors of blue and red, though probably not as often.
Green auroras result from interactions with oxygen atoms at higher altitudes in the Earth's atmosphere. When solar wind particles collide with these oxygen atoms, they can emit green light at a specific wavelength, creating the distinctive green color of the aurora borealis.
When mixing paint (subtractive) red and green gives a brown color. When red and green light are combined (additive, e.g., using diodes) a yellow color is seen.
The rarest color in auroras is blue. Blue auroras occur at higher altitudes than other colors, around 60 miles above the Earth's surface. They are less commonly seen compared to green and red auroras.
Aurora is most commonly associated with shifting colors in the sky, commonly seen as pink, green, blue, or purple.
green and magenta
grass green
Green is the commonest color in the Aurora Borealis as green is produced when charged particles from the sun collide with atoms of oxygen at a high level. The Aurora over Greenland would sometimes show colors of blue and red, though probably not as often.
green
red and green
Chlorophyll
chlorophyll is a substance which contained in leaf, it has green color, and gives a green color to most of leafs/trees. It helps plants for photosynthesis process. For me it likes melanine which gives skin color to human.
the color of Belle's dress in this scene is green and dark green.
chlorophyll gives plants their green color
Chlorophyll A and B is what gives leafs their green colour.
It gives it its green color