Yes, humans can see the color yellow.
Colors don't exist - they are a mental coding for frequency distribution of the electromagnetic energy we call light. Yellow is a purely mental construct. Common to most but not all humans.
We see the color yellow when light enters our eyes and stimulates special cells called cones in the retina. These cones are sensitive to different wavelengths of light, and when they are stimulated by light with a wavelength around 570-590 nanometers, we perceive the color yellow.
You would see that the lemon appears yellow when a green light is shined on it. Yellow is the color that the lemon reflects back to your eyes.
Humans cannot see the color ultraviolet because our eyes are not sensitive to that wavelength of light. Ultraviolet light has a shorter wavelength than visible light, making it invisible to the human eye.
When you mix green and yellow together, you get the color called "yellow-green."
Colors don't exist - they are a mental coding for frequency distribution of the electromagnetic energy we call light. Yellow is a purely mental construct. Common to most but not all humans.
Yes, moose can see colors, but their color vision is limited compared to humans. They have dichromatic vision, which means they primarily see two color ranges, likely blue and yellow, but have difficulty distinguishing between red and green. This ability helps them navigate their environment and find food, but their color perception is not as rich as that of humans.
Cats, like dogs, can see some colours: They can tell the difference between red, blue and yellow, and between red and green, although these are less distinguishable. Cats are able to distinguish between blues and violets better than between colours near the red end of the spectrum.Colour is of little importance to cats. They hunt by the motion of their prey, not by its colour.Another AnswerCats actually see in color - the colors they can see are between the yellow and purple spectrum and are not as vibrant as the colors we see. To them the object will look similar as we see it in color, but faded.
I see sunshine and happiness.
Indeed they are color blind, they cannot see colors that humans can see. But they can see the ultraviolet rays of the sun, that us humans can see.
bart simpson is the color yellow watch the simpsons again and you will see that he is yellow
Yellow
Chickens have very well developed color vision. They even have one additional cone type. Where humans have red, green and blue receptors, chickens have an additional violet cone. So, yes, chickens can see "yellow" and will peck at yellow out of curiosity. If that yellow item is tasty (they also have well defined taste buds), then when they see a similar yellow item, they will again peck at it. Therefore, it's a combination of identifying the color "yellow" and the learned behavior of "yellow tastes good".
Neitz confirmed that dogs actually do see color, but many fewer colors than normal humans do. Instead of seeing the rainbow as violet, blue, blue-green, green, yellow, orange and red, dogs would see it as dark blue, light blue, gray, light yellow, darker yellow (sort of brown), and very dark gray.
Humans see with color. Dogs simply have less cone receptors therefore they do not see light. Dogs only see in black and white.
The color yellow makes them easy to see.
No the color yellow is harder t see from far away than the color blue because yellow kinda blends with the enviorment.