Green.
Baby blue is a light shade of blue. Things like a baby boy's room would be a baby blue. It's just a light shade of blue.
A blue ray would bend light the most in a prism, as shorter wavelengths of light (like blue) are refracted more than longer wavelengths (like red or green) when passing through a medium like glass.
No, but if there was it would be a hack just like light platinum, blue sea, darkcry ...
Blue light plays a crucial role in the growth of plants as it helps regulate processes like photosynthesis and photomorphogenesis. Specifically, blue light stimulates chlorophyll production and influences plant development, including leaf expansion and flowering. Inadequate or excessive exposure to blue light can negatively affect plant growth and development.
Well I personally would go for like a non natural colour say pink, light blue or purple. I think it would look good with blue eyes.
its a little leaf like thing u can buy for making blue dyes
Exposure to blue light can stimulate plant growth by influencing processes like photosynthesis and photomorphogenesis. Blue light is absorbed by plant pigments called photoreceptors, which then trigger various growth responses in the plant. This can lead to increased leaf expansion, stem elongation, and overall plant development.
It would look cyan because the colors would be filtered.
I like lilacs and white with light blue.
BLUE!!!!! ----- The color (hue) will be a blue, but it depends on how your mixing what color you finally get. If mixing subtractively (like inks on paper) your colors are filtering the light that reflects off the page (we'll assume the light and the page is white). In this case "light blue" is a transparent blue and dark blue is blue and black, so the white light in the room will be both filtered by the pale blue and the dark blue. The pale blue removes some of the light which isn't blue, the dark blue removes a lot of the light - even some blue. None of this puts any light back, so the dark blue would dominate - you would get dark blue. If you were mixing light (additive mixing), dark blue is just a small amount of (dim) blue light and light blue is blue light with a bit less of all other colours in it (white). What you get then is the light blue, with just a little extra blue in it. Imagine a room in daylight and switching on a blue light-blub - would you notice the room becoming more "blue"? You'd probably still call it light-blue. If mixing opaque paints and you took a pale blue (blue+white) and very dull blue (blue+black) you would get a cool-blue-gray. You certainly wouldn't get back to a spectrum (saturated) blue.
Blue Like A Light Blue
Blue appears black under a yellow light. For example if you have a blue car and you put a yellow light on it will appear black due to the absence of color. The light has nothing to reflect back.