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Color

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Red and purple regions are not as bright as those in the middle regions (yellow ... White also results from mixing red, green and blue light (only 3 colors) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Color


1
Chapter 28
  • Color

2
The Color Spectrum
  • Newton was the first to study color by using a
    prism
  • He called the spread of colors a spectrum and
    noted the order
  • Red, orange, yellow, green, blue, and violet (ROY
    G BV)
  • Are white and black colors?
  • White is a combination of all colors of light and
    black is the absence of light

3
The Color Spectrum
  • Sunlight is an example of white light
  • Under white lightwhite objects appear white and
    colored objects appear their color
  • Newton showed that the color spectrum of the
    prism was actually a property of white lightnot
    the colors of the spectrum
  • He did this by recombining the colors in a second
    prism to make white light again
  • All the colors (on top of each other) combine to
    produce white light
  • Objects appear black when they absorb all visible
    light

4
Light Colors
  • When a light wave with a single frequency strikes
    an object, a number of things could happen.
  • The light wave could be absorbed by the object,
    in which case its energy is converted to heat
  • the light wave could be reflected by the object
  • the light wave could be transmitted by the
    object.
  • Rarely however does just a single frequency of
    light strike an object.
  • While it does happen, it is more usual that light
    of many frequencies or even all frequencies are
    incident towards the surface of objects.
  • When this occurs, objects have a tendency to
    selectively absorb, reflect or transmit light of
    certain frequencies.

5
Light Colors
  • Reflection and transmission of light waves occur
    because the frequencies of the light waves do not
    match the natural frequencies of vibration of the
    objects.
  • When light of these frequencies strike an object,
    the electrons in the atoms of the object begin
    vibrating.
  • But instead of vibrating in resonance at a large
    amplitude, the electrons vibrate for brief
    periods of time with small amplitudes of
    vibration then the energy is reemitted as a
    light wave.
  • If the object is transparent, then the vibrations
    of the electrons are passed on to neighboring
    atoms through the bulk of the material and
    reemitted on the opposite side of the object.
    Such frequencies of light waves are said to be
    transmitted.
  • If the object is opaque, then the vibrations of
    the electrons are not passed from atom to atom
    through the bulk of the material rather the
    electrons vibrate for short periods of time and
    then reemit the energy as a reflected light wave.
    Such frequencies of light are said to be
    reflected

6
Color by Selective Reflection
  • Color comes from frequencies that are reflected
  • The color is not in the object itself, but in the
    light which strikes the object.
  • The only role that the object plays is that it
    might contain atoms capable of absorbing one or
    more frequencies of the visible light which shine
    upon it.
  • If an object absorbs all of the frequencies of
    visible light except for the frequency associated
    with green light, then the object will appear
    green in the presence of ROYGBIV. Reflected light
    (color) is not at the natural (resonant)
    frequency of the material
  • Most materials absorb light of some frequencies
    and reflect the rest
  • A red rose
  • Petals appear red because it absorbs all
    frequencies except redreflects the red
  • Shine a green light on a rose and the petals will
    appear black because the green light is
    resonantit is being absorbed
  • Apparent color depends on the objects natural
    frequency AND what is illuminating it

7
Color by Selective Reflection
  • An object can only reflect light of frequencies
    present in its illumination
  • A candle emits a yellowish light making things
    appear yellowish
  • Incandescent (non fluorescent light) emits all
    visible frequencies but is more rich in lower
    frequencies enhancing reds
  • Fluorescent light is richer in higher frequencies
    enhancing blues
  • Perceived color depends on the light source
  • Color differences are most easily detected in
    direct sunlight

8
Color by Reflection
  • Which color(s) of light are reflected by the
    paper and what color the paper will appear to an
    observer?

9
Color by Selective Transmission
  • The color of a transparent object depends on the
    color of light it transmitsdepends on the
    frequencies of color that are non resonant
  • A blue piece of glass appears blue because it
    transmits primarily blue and absorbs all the
    colors illuminating it
  • The glass warms due to the absorbed frequencies
  • The material in the glass that selectively
    absorbs colored light is pigmentfine particles
    that selectively certain frequencies and transmit
    others

10
Color by Transmission
  • What color will the glass appear?
  • When red light shines on a red rose, why do the
    leaves become warmer than the petals?
  • What color does a ripe (yellow) banana appear
    when illuminated with red light? Yellow light?
    Green light? Blue light?

11
Sunlight
  • The brightness of solar frequencies is
    unevensunlight is made up of a wide range of
    frequencies
  • Red and purple regions are not as bright as those
    in the middle regions (yellow and green)

Radiation Curve of Sunlight
Human eyes are most sensitive to
yellow-green. Newer fire engines are being
painted yellow-green and sodium vapor street
lights are being used to illuminate the night.
12
Mixing Colored Light
  • Light of all frequencies mixed together is white
  • White also results from mixing red, green and
    blue light (only 3 colors)
  • This is because there are 3 types of cones (color
    receptors) in the human eye
  • Stimulated by lowest 1/3 of spectrum - light of
    these frequencies appears red
  • middle
    green
  • highest
    blue

(i) (ii) (iii)
When all 3 types of cones are stimulated equally,
we perceive white.
13
Mixing Colored Light
  • In fact, any color in the spectrum can be
    produced by various amounts of red, green and
    blue these are called the additive primary
    colors
  • Red Green Yellow
  • Red Blue Magenta
  • Blue Green Cyan
  • Red Green Blue White

14
Complementary Colors
  • Complementary Colors are two that are added
    together to form white light

Magenta Green White This works because
magenta is a combination of red and blue Yellow
Blue White (yellow is a combination of red
and green) Red Cyan White (cyan is a
combination of green and blue)
Complementary Colors Magenta Green Yellow
Blue Red Cyan
15
Complementary Colors
  • What color does red light plus green light
    appear?
  • yellow
  • What color does white light minus red light
    appear?
  • cyan
  • What color does white light minus magenta light
    appear?
  • green

16
Complementary Colors
  • If magenta light and yellow light are added
    together will white light appear?
  • What color will the paper appear?

17
Mixing Colored Pigments
  • If R B G white, then why does mixing red,
    blue, and green paints make a brownish-black?
  • Its because youre mixing pigments, rather than
    mixing lights directly pigments absorb specific
    colors,
  • A red paint pigment absorbs the complementary
    color (cyan), and reflects red.
  • This is color subtraction pigment takes away
    the complementary color (cyan) from the impinging
    light.
  • So if you mix red, blue and green pigments, then
    you are absorbing cyan, magenta, and yellow,
    everything. So you get black ( absence of
    color).

18
Mixing Colored Pigments
  • Color subtraction--in this process, the ultimate
    color appearance of an object is determined by
    beginning with a single color or mixture of
    colors and identifying what color or colors of
    light are subtracted from the original set.
  • The subtractive primary colors (magenta, cyan,
    and yellow) are used in printers to produce full
    color images
  • Example Magenta light shines on a sheet of paper
    containing a yellow pigment. Determine the
    appearance of the paper.
  • M R B Y absorbs B
  • Color (R B) B R

http//www.control.co.kr/java1/colors/TabbedcolorB
ox.html
19
Mixing Colored Pigments
  • Yellow light shines on a sheet of paper
    containing a red pigment. Determine the
    appearance of the paper.
  • Y G R R absorbs B and G
  • (G R) G R
  • Yellow light shines on a sheet of paper
    containing a blue pigment. Determine the
    appearance of the paper.
  • Y G R B absorbs R and G
  • (G R) (G R) Absence of color--black

20
Mixing Colored Pigments
  • What primary paint colors (CMY) or combination of
    paint colors would you use to paint the boy
    below? He has pink (magenta) skin, blue jeans, a
    yellow sweater, a black baseball cap, red
    sneakers and aqua-colored socks. Indicate the
    primary colors of paint to be used on the diagram
    below.
  • Skin ______________
  • Jeans ______________
  • Sweater ______________
  • Cap ______________
  • Sneakers ______________
  • Socks ______________

magenta
cyan magenta
yellow
cyan, magenta yellow
magenta yellow
cyan
21
Why is the Sky Blue?
  • The sky is blue because of scattering!
  • light striking atoms and molecules in a gas (far
    apart from each other) gets re-emitted in many
    directions
  • The tinier the particle, the more
    higher-frequency light it will re-emit
  • sound vibrations smaller bells have higher
    pitch than larger bells
  • N2 and O2 in atmosphere are like such tiny
    bells.
  • So, as light moves through atmosphere, most goes
    in straight lines, but when it hits a molecule,
    the higher frequencies (violet, blue) especially
    get scattered in all directions.
  • blue reaches you in any direction you look - you
    see blue light from everywhere overhead a blue
    sky !

22
Why is the Sky Blue?
  • But violet is higher frequency than blue why
    dont we see a violet sky?
  • We would if our eyes were equally sensitive to
    violet and blue, but the cones in our eyes sense
    blue much more, so we sense a blue sky.
  • Other creatures with better violet vision like
    bumble bees, do see a violet sky!
  • The lower frequencies pass more or less in a
    straight line
  • red scatters a tenth as much as violet
  • DEMO shine flashlight through water with a few
    drops of milk in it.
  • View from the side, see bluish haze.
  • If look straight through, see reddish-orange as
    this doesnt get scattered so much.
  • Why are some skies bluer than others?
  • Depends on whats in the atmospherehow much
    water, dust, etc
  • these particles are larger than O2, N2, so
    scatter lower frequencies strongly as well,
    making sky less blue and more whitish.
  • Drier atmospheres (in Greece and Italy) have
    deeper blue skies than more humid ones
  • Polluted cities even grayish skies, because of
    exhaust gases absorbing rather than scattering

23
Why are Sunsets Red?
  • Light thats not scattered is light that is
    transmitted i.e. reds-oranges especially.
  • Previous DEMO front view of flashlight through
    milky-water.
  • The thicker the atmosphere the light passes
    through, the more of the higher-frequencies that
    will be re-scattered away from the transmitted
    beam
  • the transmitted beam is redder.
  • This is what happens at sunsets (or sunrises)

Red-orange sunset, as almost all higher
frequencies scattered away.
As day progresses, more blue/violet scattered, as
sunlight travels greater distance through
atmosphere, so the sun looks increasingly orange.
24
Why are Clouds White?
  • First, what are clouds?
  • A mass of water droplets of various sizes
    suspended in the atmosphere.
  • Different sizes of droplets scatter different
    frequencies
  • smallest ones scatter high frequencies like
    blue/violet
  • slightly bigger ones scatter medium frequencies
    like green
  • bigger ones scatter reds
  • net scattered is WHITE!
  • If droplets and clouds get too large, get
    appreciable absorption, so they look darker
    (grayer).

25
Why is Water Greenish Blue?
  • If look at surface of lake or ocean, it may
    appear deep blue but thats because it reflects
    the skys blue.
  • However, if put white piece of paper under water,
    it is a pale greenish-blue.
  • Why?
  • Although water is transparent in the
    visible-light regime, it does absorb some red
    red light is reduced to ΒΌ of original brightness
    in 15 m of water.
  • Since complementary color to red is cyan, this
    means water is cyan.
  • Explains why many red crabs look black in deep
    water.
  • Water also absorbs strongly in the infrared,
    which is why sunlight warms water

26
Questions?
  • If molecules in the sky scattered low-frequency
    light more than high-frequency light, what color
    would the sky be? What color would sunsets be?
  • The day-time sky would have low-frequencies,
    reddish-orange. The sunsets would be
    white-minus-these, blue!
  • Why does smoke from a campfire look blue against
    trees near the ground but yellow against the sky?
  • Particles in the smoke scatter mostly blue
    light, so against a dark background like the
    trees near the ground, we see the smoke as blue
    (analogous to sky, with dark beyond earth). we
    see the scattered light.
  • But, against the bright sky, you see mostly the
    sky-minus-light-scattered from the smoke, white
    - blue yellow.
  • This is also why the sun looks yellow in the
    day time!

27
The Atomic Color Code
  • Each element has its own characteristic color
    when it emits light
  • If the atoms are far apartyou can see the true
    color of the element
  • Neon glows red
  • Mercury glows bluish violet
  • Helium glows pink
  • If the atoms are close together the
    characteristic colors smudge to produce a
    continuous spectrum
  • Light from glowing elements is analyzed using a
    spectroscope (an instrument used to separate
    light from a hot gas or other light source into
    its constituent frequencies)

28
The Atomic Color Code
  • Looking at light from a glowing element through a
    spectroscope shows the colors are a made up of a
    variety of different light frequencies
  • The spectrum of an element appears as a series of
    lines with each line corresponding to a distinct
    frequency of light
  • Each element produces its own pattern of
    linesbecause each element has its own electron
    configuration that emits distinct frequencies
  • Physicists use atomic spectra to find the atomic
    composition of common materials
  • Helium was discovered using a spectroscope

The atomic spectrum for helium.
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