Submitted by Oheligud t3_yh9wwi in explainlikeimfive
JudgeAdvocateDevil t1_iudnjzy wrote
Reply to comment by Marlsfarp in ELI5: Why are the colours in rainbows in separate lines? by Oheligud
Moving on from Newtons work, James Clerk Maxwell developed the understanding that all light we detect is a combination of red, green, and blue (excluding tetrachromats). Even thought we see the rainbow, that's all made up by our brain using RGB data.
Omphalopsychian t1_iudqjry wrote
The light in a rainbow is made up of many more wavelengths than red, green, and blue. Indeed, every color and shade in the rainbow is a distinct wavelength. Our eyeballs have three different kinds of color receptors. Each receptor responds to visible light, but more strongly to certain wavelengths. You can trigger any color that we can perceive using 3 wavelengths such as red, green, and blue (some other combinations can also be used). We can perceive many more wavelengths than that; we just can't distinguish them.
SelfDistinction t1_iudqtzd wrote
Technically we're all seeing in XYZ , which can then be mapped onto RGB. Mostly.
If an optical illusion tells you "you're going to see a colour that doesn't exist!", It's because by staring at a colour for long exhausts some of the detectors, and then the remaining detectors will send a colour in XYZ space that doesn't properly map to RGB.
nighthawk_something t1_iuf605w wrote
Say what?
SelfDistinction t1_iuf8ht1 wrote
No. Colour spaces are complicated and make me cry.
Viewing a single comment thread. View all comments