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Published byMarcia Blake Modified over 8 years ago
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The Source of Colours Topic #6
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What were they thinking? At one time, people believed that colour was something that was added to light When white light struck a green leaf, the leaf was adding green to the light Our good buddy Sir Isaac Newton figured out this wasn’t true in the 17 th century
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Such a bright guy Using prisms, he discovered that bands of colours would emerge from white light When he passed the colours through a reverse prism, he discovered that the rainbow of colours formed back into white light
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Prisms
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When light is refracted into different colours, the resulting pattern is called a spectrum ROY G BIV (red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, violet) is the pattern for sunlight This pattern is called the solar spectrum A rainbow is an example of this solar spectrum
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When light strikes an object, the light may be reflected off the object, absorbed by the object, or transmitted through the object Example: when light passes through a blue bottle, the glass absorbs all the colours of light except the blue Only the blue light is transmitted or reflected and so the bottle appears blue
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Additive Primary Colours The three colours red, green and blue are called the additive primary colours They are called additive because adding all three together in proper amounts will make white light The 3 secondary colours are yellow, cyan, and magenta
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Additive Primary Colours TVs use additive primary colours The screen contains groups of three tiny phoshor dots Each dot glows with a different colour when it receives energy from the electrons inside the picture tube In each group, one dot glows red, one blue and one green – if all 3 glow you see white light
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How We See Colour The retina of the human eye contains two types of cells that respond to light Some cells look like tiny cylinders – they are called rods Rods detect the presence of light The other cells sort of look like cones and are therefore called cones
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Cones detect colour in our eyes. There are 3 types of cones (like a TV screen) and each one detects a different colour
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Colour Blindness The cone cells in some people’s eyes are unable to detect certain colours This condition is called colour blindness
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