The Process of Color Subtraction
The Process of Color Subtraction
Color Subtraction
The Electromagnetic and Visible Spectra
Visible Light and the Eye's Response
Light Absorption, Reflection, and Transmission
Color Addition
Color Subtraction
Blue Skies and Red Sunsets
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2/21/2021 Physics Tutorial: Color Subtraction
mixture, we must subtract blue light. After the subtractive process, only green light remains. Thus,
the shirt will appear green in the presence of cyan light. Observe the representation of this by the
diagram at the right and the equation below.
C - B = (G + B) - B = G
From these two examples, we can conclude that a shirt that looks yellow when white light shines
upon it will look green when cyan light shines upon it. This confuses
many students of physics, especially those who still believe that the color
of a shirt is in the shirt itself. This is the misconception that was targeted
earlier in Lesson 2 as we discussed how visible light interacts with matter
to produce color. In that part of Lesson 2, it was emphasized that the color
of an object does not reside in the object itself. Rather, the color is in the
light that shines upon the object and that ultimately becomes reflected or
transmitted to our eyes. Extending this conception of color to the above two scenarios, we would
reason that the shirt appears yellow if there is some red and green light shining upon it. Yellow light
is a combination of red and green light. A shirt appears yellow if it reflects red and green light to our
eyes. In order to reflect red and green light, these two primary colors of light must be present in the
incident light.
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