Color | Definition, Perception, Types, & Facts - Encyclopedia Britannica
Maybe your like
The nature of colour
1 of 2
2 of 2Aristotle viewed colour to be the product of a mixture of white and black, and this was the prevailing belief until 1666, when Isaac Newton’s prism experiments provided the scientific basis for the understanding of colour. Newton showed that a prism could break up white light into a range of colours, which he called the spectrum (see figure), and that the recombination of these spectral colours re-created the white light. Although he recognized that the spectrum was continuous, Newton used the seven colour names red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet for segments of the spectrum by analogy with the seven notes of the musical scale.
Britannica Quiz The Origins of Colors, Pigments, and Dyes Newton realized that colours other than those in the spectral sequence do exist, but he noted that
all the colours in the universe which are made by light, and depend not on the power of imagination, are either the colours of homogeneal lights [i.e., spectral colours], or compounded of these.
Newton also recognized that
Access for the whole family! Bundle Britannica Premium and Kids for the ultimate resource destination. Subscribe rays, to speak properly, are not coloured. In them there is nothing else than a certain power…to stir up a sensation of this or that colour.
The unexpected difference between light perception and sound perception clarifies this curious aspect of colour. When beams of light of different colours, such as red and yellow, are projected together onto a white surface in equal amounts, the resulting perception of the eye signals a single colour (in this case, orange) to the brain, a signal that may be identical to that produced by a single beam of light. When, however, two musical tones are sounded simultaneously, the individual tones can still be easily discerned; the sound produced by a combination of tones is never identical to that of a single tone. A tone is the result of a specific sound wave, but a colour can be the result of a single light beam or a combination of any number of light beams.
Also spelled: color (Show more) Key People: Isaac Newton Edwin Herbert Land John Tyndall Karl Schwarzschild Ivan Vasilyevich Klyun (Show more) Related Topics: magenta intensity cyan purity colour atlas (Show more) On the Web: Science Learning Hub - Colours of light (Dec. 01, 2025) (Show more) See all related contentA colour can, however, be precisely specified by its hue, saturation, and brightness—three attributes sufficient to distinguish it from all other possible perceived colours. The hue is that aspect of colour usually associated with terms such as red, orange, yellow, and so forth. Saturation (also known as chroma or tone) refers to relative purity. When a pure, vivid, strong shade of red is mixed with a variable amount of white, weaker or paler reds are produced, each having the same hue but a different saturation. These paler colours are called unsaturated colours. Finally, light of any given combination of hue and saturation can have a variable brightness (also called intensity or value), which depends on the total amount of light energy present.
Tag » Colours
-
Coolors - The Super Fast Color Palettes Generator!
-
Lists Of Colors - Wikipedia
-
Colour - Simple English Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
-
Learn About Colours | Kids - EnglishClub
-
Colour Paint Chart - Singapore - Nippon Paint
-
Color Theory - Understanding The 7 Fundamentals Of Color - 99Designs
-
Adobe Color: Color Wheel, A Color Palette Generator
-
Color Theory For Designers, Part 1: The Meaning Of Color
-
What Is COLOUR
-
52 Best Different Types Of Colours Ideas - Pinterest
-
Colours - LearnEnglish Kids - British Council
-
Meaning Of Colour In Longman Dictionary Of Contemporary English
-
Dulux Paint Colours Chart