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).
Yellow.
it makes a light blue green
light green Guys!!! How obvious light green Guys!!! How obvious
If you combine mint green and light pink you will have a light, warm, muddy color. Mint green is a tint of the color green, and light pink is a tint of the color red. These two colors are complimentary, which means that they have little to no pigments in common. When combined they contain too many pigments, so none of them will dominate the others and the color will look murky.
yellow.
It appears black. A green pigment can only reflect green light and red light is a primary colour, that is it contains only red.
It would be come a white light( it will show up to have a rainbow streak on the screen though)
I am not exactly sure, but red and green paint together make brown.
Yellow. The light is 'additive' and not 'subtractive' like printed inks.
black since the object is blue, it reflects only blue light thus, shining red and green lights on it will only cause the object to absorb the two colors and it will result to the appearance of the object as black
The 'pixels' on a TV screen are red, blue, and green.
light source
Green is not a primary color. The primary colors are red, blue, and yellow.
the sun since it is white light it has more color. plants have better photosynthesis when in blues and reds light which are absorbed. green is not used so it is reflected giving the color of green in most plants.
light green
green the pigments absorb every color in the light spectrum but green.
The little light will turn from from an "orange-ish" color to a green.
Light green is one of the many shades of green in the color spectrum. Pale green and lime green are two of the names that are given to this color when classified.