The exact wavelength of green light is around 510 nanometers.
The color RED has the longest wavelenth, and the color VIOLET has the shortest wavelenth. ---- Also Wavelenth is inversely propotional to frequency, so we can also say that color VIOLET has longest frequency and color RED has the shortest. VIBGYOR V-Violet (Highest Frequency, Shortest Wavelenth) I-Indigo B-Blue G-Green Y-Yellow O-Orange R-Red (Highest Wavelenth,Shortest Frequency)
Green light - Green, White light - Green, Red light - Black
Yellow light. They make a "tricolor" LED that glows red when DC biased in one direction, green when DC biased in the other direction and yellow when AC biased. There are only two diodes in it - a red and a green. When you AC bias this thing, both diodes glow and...you get yellow!
When you shine a green light on a green object, the object will reflect the green light and appear brighter or more vivid in color. Green objects absorb most of the other colors of light and reflect green light, so they will be most visibly affected by green light.
A red light will be needed to combine with magenta light to produce green light. Green light is the complementary color to magenta, so by mixing red light with magenta light, the result will be green light.
If the glass appears purple, it means it is absorbing most of the green, yellow, and red light frequencies. This leaves mainly blue and red light to be transmitted through the glass, giving it a purple appearance.
The color RED has the longest wavelenth, and the color VIOLET has the shortest wavelenth. ---- Also Wavelenth is inversely propotional to frequency, so we can also say that color VIOLET has longest frequency and color RED has the shortest. VIBGYOR V-Violet (Highest Frequency, Shortest Wavelenth) I-Indigo B-Blue G-Green Y-Yellow O-Orange R-Red (Highest Wavelenth,Shortest Frequency)
You get light green.
Because a green light has a light bulb behind green plastic.
disadvantages of wavelenth division multiplexing
wavelenth mesured wavenoumber
it has specific wavelenth
Green light - Green, White light - Green, Red light - Black
Yellow is a primary color and green is a secondary color. When these two are mixed you will get a tertiary color which is yellow-green or light green.
The green light in the sky in east London could be due to a natural phenomenon like the Aurora Borealis, or it could be from a man-made source such as a laser show or a special event lighting. Without more information, it's difficult to determine the exact cause of the green light.
Yellow light. They make a "tricolor" LED that glows red when DC biased in one direction, green when DC biased in the other direction and yellow when AC biased. There are only two diodes in it - a red and a green. When you AC bias this thing, both diodes glow and...you get yellow!
Dark green.A more descriptive answer:It depends on the exact spectra the light emits, not just what it looks to us.If the light combines red and green wavelengths, then the green object will appear green, because of the green wavelength. The object may have a yellowish tinge because of small reflection of the red wavelength.If the light is spectral yellow and not just red + green, then the green object will appear a much darker green maybe with a slight yellow or dark-yellow tinge because of, again, small reflection of dominant yellow wavelength.