Submitted by melig1991 t3_10pcnzw in explainlikeimfive
rcm718 t1_j6oazxi wrote
Reply to comment by dan5280 in ELI5 why do your eyes adjust so fast to bright light but so slowly to darkness? by melig1991
But why use a green light instead of red?
dan5280 t1_j6obmno wrote
I'm not entirely sure, but I do know from experience that red light will blow out your goggles (like if Joe infantryman in the back wants to try and read his map in flight). I assume it's something to do with wavelengths but I'm no scientist.
rcm718 t1_j6ogt3d wrote
I mean, I am a scientist and I don't know. ¯_(ツ)_/¯ But like you said, maybe it has to do with the goggles being sensitive to infrared and red is close enough in wavelength to infrared that it can overload the gogs.
As long as we're speculating - here's a substantially unsubstantiated web page about it. It says green light at low levels also doesn't mess up night vision. And green can be used at lower brightness, has better contrast and color discrimination, and is better for common tasks like reading maps.
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