physics of color. spectrum of visible light wavelengths & photons red photon blue photon green...

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Physic Physic s of s of Color Color

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Page 1: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

Physics Physics of Colorof Color

Page 2: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

Spectrum of Visible Light

Page 3: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

Wavelengths & Photons

Red Photon

Blue Photon

Green Photon

Yellow Photon

PrismSpectrum

Particles of light, called photons, each have a wavelength.

Page 4: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

Newton’s Color Wheel

Prism spectrum is a straight line, but Isaac Newton described color using a circular wheel

Page 5: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

Trichromatic Theorists

Thomas Young

(1773-1829) English physicist

Hermann von Helmholtz (1821-1894)German physicist

James Clerk Maxwell(1831-1879)Scottish physicist

Page 6: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

Additive Color Wheel

SpectralColors

R

Y

B G

M

C

RedYellowGreenCyanBlueMagenta

Page 7: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

Hue, Saturation, Value

Color wheel is nota single wheel butstack of wheels that range invalue.

Page 8: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

Color Vision in the Eye

Three types of cones (color)One type of rod (B/W only)

Page 9: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,
Page 10: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

Color Blindness

Classification

Incidence (%)

Males Females

AnomalousTrichromacy

6.3 0.37

Protanomaly(Red-cone weak)

1.3 0.02

Deuteranomaly(Green-cone weak)

5.0 0.35

Tritanomaly(Blue-cone weak)

0.0001 0.0001

Dichromacy 2.4 0.03

Protanopia(Red-cone absent)

1.3 0.02

Deuteranopia(Green-cone absent)

1.2 0.01

Tritanopia(Blue-cone absent)

0.001 0.03

Rod Monochromacy(no cones)

0.00001 0.00001 29 or 70? 21 or 74?

Weakness or absence of one of the three types of cones is the cause of color blindness, leading to a reduced ability to distinguish colors.

Page 11: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

Why Yellow & Orange are Special

Blue

RedGreen

Con

e S

ensi

tivi

ty

Peak sensitivities of green and red cone are close together, so we easily separate colors in this range, probably to spot ripe fruit and …

CIE color “wheel”

Wavelength

Hot Sauce!!!Hot Sauce!!!

Page 12: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

Seeing YellowSodium lamps emit pure yellow photons

Color monitor can only emit red, green, and blue (RGB); creates other colors by selectively turning RGB pixels on or off.

Page 13: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

circles overlapping and indicate the areas producing the primary and secondary colours.

RED

GREEN

BLUE

YELLOWCYAN

MAGENTA

WHITE

http://lectureonline.cl.msu.edu/~mmp/applist/RGBColor/c.htm

Page 14: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

Adding Color Lights

Stream ofred & green photons looks same as yellow photons(metamerism)

Theatrical lighting

or

YELLOW

Eye toBrain

Notice overlap of red, green, & blue is seen as whitewhite light

Page 15: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

How does one get a complimentary color?

• Give some examples.

• - mix any two primary colors which becomes a complimentary color to the remaining primary color

• - e.g. yellow (redprimary + greenprimary) is complimentary to blueprimary

Yellow and blue would make white light

Page 16: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

Additive Color Mixing

• Colors can be created by adding colors.

• e.g. red and green = yellow

• (2 primary colors = secondary color)

• e.g. red and blue = magenta

Page 17: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

Review-ColorVisible light is made up of:

• Wavelengths of the electromagnetic spectrum from  = 400 nm (4.00 x 10–7 m)to  = 700 nm (7.00 x 10–7 m)

• Newton called the ordered arrangement of colors from violet to red a spectrum.

• A spectrum can be produced by passing a light beam through a prism.

• White light can be produced by adding the colors, red, green and blue which are also known as the primary colors.

• Secondary colors are formed by:•  mixing any two of the primary colors• Secondary colors include yellow, cyan and magenta.

Page 18: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

red

orange

yellow

green

blue

indigo

violet

The main spectral Colors

Page 19: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

R O Y Goes Bowling In Venezuela

• lowest frequency highest frequency• longest wavelength shortest wavelength• least refracted most refracted• lowest energy highest energy• We see a specific color because we see a particular

frequency.• Think of frequency as the number of crests per second

hitting the retina of your eye.• So, if 4.29 x 1014 crests hit your retina in one second, then

you see a visible part of the electromagnetic spectrum known as a color called red.

Page 20: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

The Color of Light and Refraction

• When light waves pass from a less dense into a more dense medium, such as from air to water, the speed of the light wave decreases.

• Yet, we see the same color under water as in air, therefore we still have 4.29 x 1014 crests hitting our retina per second.

• This means that as the speed of the wave slows down, the wavelength gets shorter (crunched).

• This way, the number of crests hitting the retina per second remains constant, ensuring that the color remains unchanged.

Page 21: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

Subtractive Process

Subtractive ProcessColors can be created by the subtractive process using filters.e.g.  R O Y G B I V   

yellow filter

We See Mostly Yellow

Page 22: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

Subtractive Process

e.g. R O Y G B I V   

blue filter We See Mostly Blue

Page 23: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

Subtractive Processe.g.  R O Y G B I V   

blue filter

red filterWe See Black ( No Color)

Page 24: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

Artist’s Handbook

These spectral reflectance curves and those of many other standard pigments are found in Mayer’s book.

Page 25: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

Subtractive Processe.g.   R O Y G B I V   

green filter

yellow filterWe See MostlyYellow

Page 26: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

Why Paint a Color Grid?

“The results of mixing colored paints are sufficiently complicated so that no fully reliable theory has yet been developed. For the artist, there is no choice but to be fully familiar with the mixing properties of the paints on the palette.”

Light and Color in Nature and Art S. Williamson and H. Cummins

Page 27: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

Mixing Blue & Red Paint

Mixing paint or ink is different from adding colors together by light.

Mix of blue and red paint produces a blackish brown

Page 28: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

Spectral Reflectance Curves

                                                      

When white light shines on a colored object, some photonsabsorbed, others reflected by the object’s surface.

White Red

Page 29: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

Name That Pigment

Titanium White

Cadmium Red

Burnt Sienna

BLUE GREEN RED

0%

100%BLUE GREEN RED BLUE GREEN RED

Page 30: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

Name That Pigment

Phthalocyanine Green

Cadmium Yellow

Cobalt Blue

BLUE GREEN RED

0%

100%BLUE GREEN RED BLUE GREEN RED

Page 31: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

Reflectance of Pigment MixturesBLUE GREEN RED

Take a mixture of equal parts cadmium red and cobalt blue. The mixture reflectance profile is defined as the geometric mean (square root of the product) of their separate reflectances for every wavelength in the spectrum.

NOTE: This only gives approximate results; full theory more complex!

For example, if cobalt blue reflects 20% of a specific blue wavelength (say 500nm), and cadmium red reflects only 5%, then their mixture will reflect roughly 10% of the 500nm light. (The product 20% x 5% = 100%, the square root of 100% is 10%.)

Cadmium Red

Cobalt Blue

400 500 600 700Nanometers

Mixture

100%

80%

60%

40%

20%

Page 32: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

Pigments are opaque (not transparent) paints or inks placed onto opaque surfaces. These pigments absorb and reflect different amounts of color from white light.

Most of the colored objects we see on earth are made up of combinations of reflected wavelengths. Surfaces or objects illuminated by white light absorb differing proportions of visible wavelengths and reflect the remainder.

The principle of reflected color is illustrated in the following series of graphics:

   

Page 33: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

•   a. Sunlight, as described above, is composed of equal amounts of all spectral hues (i.e., the colors of the rainbow). When sunlight, or artificial white light is shone on an opaque surface, certain wavelengths of light (colors) will be reflected off the surface while others will be absorbed by the surface. The "color" we see depends on the type and amount of reflectance of the wavelengths we identify as the spectral hues. White, as shown here, is created by the equal, full-strength (100%) reflectance of all three main spectral hues, that is 100% reflectance of blue, green and red.

  

Page 34: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

    b. Medium Grey results from the 50% absorption, 50% reflectance of blue, green and red. Darker grey happens when more than 50% of each primary color is being absorbed and less is reflected. Light grey results when more than 50% of each primary color is being reflected and less is absorbed.

     c. Black is the absence of color, or the absence of reflected light, thus the total (100%) absorption of all three primary colors.

Page 35: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

    d. Other colors can be created by the combined reflectance of certain of the spectral hues. A full strength cyan, for example, is comprised of 100% reflectance of blue and green, and 100% absorption of magenta. A medium strength cyan would result from 50% reflectance of blue and green. More or less than 50% reflectance of blue and green would form darker or lighter cyan, respectively. Note that there must be equal reflectance of blue and green in order for a true cyan to be formed. If more blue were reflected, the resulting color would be blue-green. If more green were reflected, the resulting color would be green-blue.

Page 36: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

    e. Magenta (full strength) is formed by the equal reflectance of blue and red. Thus 100% reflectance of blue and red, and 100% absorption of green, forms a full strength magenta.

    f. As with cyan and magenta, a full strength yellow is formed by the equal (100%) reflectance of red and green, and 100% absorption of blue.

Page 37: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

Pigment Color Wheel

Red

Green

Blue

http://lectureonline.cl.msu.edu/~mmp/applist/CYMColor/c.htm

Page 38: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

• The Subtractive Primary Colors, created by the mixing of the Additive Primary Colors, are Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, and also Black,  as shown here

Page 39: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

• Note that the subtractive primaries are those formed by the mixture of additive primaries. This is how paints and inks are mixed and used in painting and printing onto opaque surfaces. Note that the Subtractive Primary Colors mix to recreate the additive primaries:

Page 40: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

• Magenta + Cyan = Blue

• Cyan + Yellow = Green

• Yellow + Magenta = Red

• Cyan + Magenta + Yellow = Black (absence of color)

Page 41: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

Examples for the Subtractive primaries are shown below:

• Red (Magenta + Yellow) = White minus Green (Yellow + Cyan), minus Blue (Magenta + Cyan); in other words, Cyan is subtracted from both Green and Blue, leaving Yellow and Magenta which, when mixed, forms Red. Another way to look at it is that Green and Blue are subtracted from White, leaving only Red.

• Blue (M + C) = White - Green (Y + C) - Red (M + Y); the subtraction of Yellow from both Green and Red leaves M + C  which mixes to form Blue.

• Green (Y + C) = White - Red (M + Y) - Blue (M + C) subtract magenta from both, leaves Y + C which together forms Green.

• Black = White - Red - Blue - Green (absence of color) • Transparency example 4 color printing process

Page 42: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,
Page 43: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

How Polarizing filters work

Page 44: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

How Polarizing filters workonly transverse waves can be polarized.- only perpendicular transverse waves are cancelled

Page 45: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

Malus’s Law

Page 47: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,
Page 48: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

Fun with Colors and messing with your brain

• How anaglyph works• Viewing anaglyphs through appropriately colored glasses results

in each eye seeing a slightly different picture. In a red-blue anaglyph, for instance, the eye covered by the red filter sees the red parts of the image as "white", and the blue parts as "black" (with the brain providing some adaption for color); the eye covered by the blue filter perceives the opposite effect. True white or true black areas are perceived the same by each eye. The brain blends together the image it receives from each eye, and interprets the differences as being the result of different distances. This creates a normal stereograph image without requiring the viewer to cross his or her eyes.

• http://www.jessemazer.com/3Dphotos.html

Page 49: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,
Page 50: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

More Fun

• http://dogfeathers.com/java/spirals.html

• http://www.qualitytrading.com/illusions/

Page 51: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,
Page 52: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,
Page 53: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

Negative After-image

Stare, unfocused, at the red cross for 10 seconds then look at white wall

Page 54: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

Negative After-image

Cyan

Page 55: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

Negative After-image

Stare, unfocused, at the flag for 10 seconds then look at white wall

Page 56: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

Negative After-image

Cyan Magenta Yellow

Page 57: Physics of Color. Spectrum of Visible Light Wavelengths & Photons Red Photon Blue Photon Green Photon Yellow Photon Prism Spectrum Particles of light,

Simultaneous Contrast

Are the two gray bars the same shade of gray?

Yes, the presence of a nearby color affects perception of both hue and value, shifting both towards complement

Does the gray bar look slightly bluish?