Transcript
Page 1: 18.1 Light and Color

18.1 Light and Color

Pg. 610 - 615

Page 2: 18.1 Light and Color

When Light Strikes an Object

• When light strikes an object, the light can be reflected, transmitted, or absorbed

• Most objects can be classified into three different categories

1. Transparent2. Translucent3. Opaque

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Transparent Materials• Transmits most light that strikes it• Light passes right through without being

scattered • Transparent materials allow you to see clearly

what is on the other side – Examples: Clear glass, water, air

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Translucent Materials

• Scatters light as it passes through• Can see things behind a translucent object,

but the details are blurred– Examples: Wax Paper & Frosted Glass

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Opaque Materials

• Reflects or absorbs all of the light that strikes it– Light CANNOT pass through

• Cannot see through opaque objects– Examples: Wood, Metal, tightly woven fabric

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The Colors of Objects

• The color of an object depends on two things1. The material the object is made from2. The color of light striking the object

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Color of Opaque Objects

• Depends on the wavelengths of light that the object reflects – The color of an opaque object is the color of the

light it reflects

• Objects can appear to change color if you view them in different colored lights.

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Color of Transparent and Translucent Objects

• The color of transparent and translucent objects is the color of light it transmits

• Transparent and translucent materials are used to make color filters – Example: Lenses in sunglasses are color filters

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Combining Colors

• Three colors that combine to make any other color are called primary colors– Red, Green, Blue

• Two primary colors that combine in equal amounts produce secondary colors

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Mixing Colors of Light

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Mixing Colors of Light• Any two colors that combine to create white

light are called complementary colors– Examples: Yellow and Blue or Cyan and Red

• A color television produces many colors using only the three primary colors of light – By varying the brightness of each colored bar, the

TV can produce thousands of colors

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Mixing Pigment

• Inks, paints, and dyes have pigments– Pigments are colored substances that are used to

color other materials – Pigments absorb some colors and reflect others – As pigments are added together, fewer colors of

light are reflected and more are absorbed • The more pigments that are combined the darker the

mixture looks

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Mixing Pigments

• Primary colors of pigments are: Cyan, yellow, and magenta

• These colors combined in equal amounts produce black

• If you combine two primary colors of pigment = secondary pigments– The secondary colors of pigments are red, green,

blue


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