It depends if you are you mixing light, or if you are mixing paint. Enough different colors of light, in the correct proportions, can make white. More than 2 or 3 colors of paint, no matter what the proportions, usually makes something like peanut butter.
The difference is the color system used. Light uses the positive system, where if you mix red, green, and blue light, you get white. But, with paints, the negative system applies, and if you mix cyan, yellow, and magenta, you get black.
Cyan, Magenta, Yellow and Black are mixed to determine the right colors and tonality for the printed document or artwork. They are printed on 4 separate plates for each color and matched by a registration marks for precision.
The color of effluent water can vary depending on the contaminants present in the water. It can range from clear to murky, and may have a tint of yellow, brown, green, or blue, depending on the source and composition of the effluent. Treatment processes can help improve the color of effluent water.
The result is likely to be some shade of brown or murky gray rather than a vibrant green. This is because red and green are complementary colors that tend to cancel each other out when mixed together.
Murky water can block sunlight from reaching the plants underwater, hindering photosynthesis and plant growth. It can also reduce oxygen levels in the water, leading to stress or suffocation in aquatic plants. Additionally, excess nutrients in murky water can lead to algal blooms, which can outcompete and smother water plants.
Water plants can grow in both murky and clear water. Murky water may contain more nutrients and sediments which can help plants grow, but water clarity is not the only factor that affects plant growth. Light availability, nutrient levels, and water temperature also play important roles in the growth of water plants.
There are two possible answers. When the entire color spectrum of light is shone at once, it appears white. When a rainbow of pigments is mixed, the result will be a murky brown.
Technically in a lab situation if you have a spinner with all the colours on and spin it you should see white however if your referring to mixing the colours together using paint it will coagulate in a way which wont be white to the eye.
Rainbow Brite - 1984 Murky's Comet 1-11 was released on: USA: 1986
Mixing green and black will result in a darker shade of green, leaning more towards a murky or forest green color. The black will darken the green and create a richer, deeper tone.
The color that typically symbolizes confusion is gray or a murky shade of blue. These colors are often associated with uncertainty and lack of clarity.
When yellow is added to black, it creates a shade of dark green or olive green, depending on the ratios of the colors used. Mixing yellow with black can also create a muddy or murky greenish-brown color.
A dark, murky red.
If you mix all pigments together you will get a murky brown color that borders on black.
None; blue is a primary color. Primary colors such as yellow, blue and red (or yellow, cyan and magenta) are considered pure because they can't be created by mixing other colors. On the other hand, primary colors can be combined to make any other hue. If you want pink to take on a more bluish shade, add blue to the mixture. The result will be a variable shade of violet or purple.
A dull color is a color that lacks vibrancy, brightness, or intensity. It appears muted or faded compared to its more saturated counterpart. Examples of dull colors include murky browns, muted greys, and faded pastels.
Greenish i think
Black - ideally, though it's hard to get a full, dense black. You usually get a very dark murky brown-grey, purple-grey or some other tint that's not absolutely black. This is why printing uses *four* colours: cyan, yellow, magenta and black (CYMK). The black ink/pigment is used where fully dense blacks/greys are required.