Introduction To Three-Color Light
Introduction To Three-Color Light
1. Three-Color Light
Introduction to Three-Color Light
Many of us were taught at a young age that the primary colors are red, yellow, and blue. Our early experiences with color mixing were blending together paints where yellow and blue make green and the three colors stirred together make colors ranging from brown, gray, or black. From this we have two errors in our understanding of color. First, primary colors can be mixed together to create all other colors. Second, that red, yellow, and blue are the primary colors. When we talk about primary colors, we generally think about three colors which can be mixed together to create all of the colors of the rainbow. Have you ever tried to make black out of your red, yellow, and blue? Even more difficulttry to make fluorescent pink, silver, or gold. Primary colors cannot make all other colors, but they can make the most colors from the fewest starting resources.
different colors. If you take a magnifying glass to your computer monitor or television, you will see a regular pattern of red, green, and blue lines or dots. Each of these glows at varying intensities, just as a color printer drops varying amounts of ink. In both cases, what you perceive is the mixing of the primary colors and up to 16.8 million different colors on the screen.
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Investigation
The difference between mixed pigments and mixed light rests on how light gets reflected and absorbed. Pigment and paint are substances that absorb specific wavelengths of light, subtracting them from the light energy reflected by the surface. A blue painted surface will absorb all colors of light except the blue, which it reflects back. The reflected light reaches your eyes and you perceive the color blue. A colored light bulb or a computer monitor is a light source which shines or adds light energy of specific wavelengths. A red light bulb shines red light directly to your eyes and you perceive the color red.
Computer Monitors
A number of different technologies are used at present for computer displays or monitors. The two most common are the cathode ray tube (CRT) and the liquid crystal display (LCD; common in laptop computers). Here is a brief introduction to the CRT, although this is only the tip of the iceberg. A CRT consists of a negatively charged heated metal filament, called a cathode, inside a glass vacuum tube. Coming out from the cathode is a ray of electrons. A positively charged metal piece, called the anode, attracts the electron beam and focuses it onto the screen at the front of the glass vacuum tube, which is the front of the monitor. When excited by the beam, a coating of phosphors on the screen glows. A color CRT has three electron beams and the screen is coated with phosphors that glow in three different colors: red, green, and blue (RGB). Each electron beam will excite only the dots or lines on the screen that have been coated for its color (i.e. the beam for red excites the dots coated in a red phosphor).
Naming Colors
People have given many names to the colors they see. When Isaac Newton wrote down the colors he saw in the rainbow, he chose to break them out into seven names. We still use that list of names today, although you may find it difficult to pick out the color indigo or the color violet somewhere in the room. There are a number of basic color names that people refer to: red, orange, yellow, green, blue, purple, brown, white, and black. But individual people may not agree on what to call a specific block of color. Is it red, orange-red, salmon, burnt-sienna, or watermelon? Naming or distinguishing between colors is a very subjective process. As you study light and color throughout this course, you may find that what you think is pure red has more blue in it than the computers pure red. Dont let that confuse you; when it comes to studying color it is not the name of the color that matters most.
Investigation
Creating Colors
Part I: Create Colors
In the Tri-Color Creation Chart, guess the combination of red, green, and blue intensity values that would create the color in the left column. Enter your guess in the ColorBasics program (using the Make Colors tab) and see what color is created. Write what you would call that color in the 5th column. If it doesnt match, use the extra columns to guess again.
Green Intensity
Blue Intensity
Red
Write the name of your color in the left column, and then make your guesses.
Roses are red, Violets are blue, How can I express them In saturation, value, and hue?
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Black White Red Yellow Green Cyan Blue Magenta Orange Purple Brown Pink Light Gray Medium Gray Dark Gray