What are the main colors in the visible light spectrum

What are the main colors in the visible light spectrum
The visible light spectrum is the region of the electromagnetic spectrum visible to human eyes. It runs from approximately 400 nm (violet) to 700 nm (red).

The visible light spectrum is the region of the electromagnetic spectrum that human eyes see. It runs from wavelength of about 400 nanometers (nm) at the violet end of the spectrum to around 700 nm at the red end of the spectrum. Ultraviolet light and x-rays are the ionizing radiation beyond violet, while wavelength on the other side of red are infrared, microwaves, and radio waves.

Wavelengths and Colors of the Visible Spectrum

Isaac Newton coined the word spectrum in 1671 in his book Opticks. Spectrum is Latin for “appearance” or “apparition” and Newton used the term to describe the rainbow spectrum produced by sunlight passing through a prism. Sunlight is a form of white light, which is the color you get when all of the wavelengths of light blend together. Newton saw the colors red, orange, yellow, green, blue, and violet. But, he added the color indigo as a seventh color because he wanted to relate the colors to the seven days of the week, moons and planets known at the time, and notes of the musical scale. So, you may have learned the colors of the spectrum using the mnenonic device ROYGBIV, for red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet. Modern science has pretty much done away with indigo, since the human eye isn’t great at distinguishing it from either blue or violet. The modern range of wavelengths and colors distinguishes deep blue and light blue.

Color Wavelength Frequency Photon Energy
Red 625-700 nm 400-480 THz 1.65-1.98 eV
Orange 590-625 nm 480-510 THz 1.98-2.10 eV
Yellow 565-590 nm 510-530 THz 2.10-2.19 eV
Green 500-565 nm 530-600 THz 2.19-2.48 THz
Light Blue 484-500 nm 600-620 THz 2.48-2.56 eV
Deep Blue 450-484 nm 620-670 THz 2.56-2.75 eV
Violet 380-450 nm 670-790 THz 2.75-3.26eV

Real vs Theoretical Visible Spectrum

Although scientists assign wavelength ranges for the colors, they are continuous. There aren’t any boundaries between one color and another. The wavelength limits of human vision are ambiguous, too. Some people can see further into the infrared and ultraviolet than others. Usually, humans (and animals) that can see further into one end of the spectrum don’t see as far at the other end of the spectrum. For example, birds perceive ultraviolet light, but don’t see infrared. The human eye actually perceives ultraviolet light just fine, but the lens filters it out so the high energy light doesn’t damage the retina. Some people with artificial lenses report seeing ultraviolet.

RGB monitors aren’t able to reproduce the colors of the spectrum accurately. But, if you don’t have a prism handy, you can see the colors on a screen by rendering the spectrum against gray. You may see further than 400 nm or 700 nm, but most people see 425 nm to 690 nm.

What are the main colors in the visible light spectrum
The visible spectrum ordinarily doesn’t show up properly on RBG monitors. Rendering it on a gray background shows the actual colors. (image: Spigget, CC 3.0)

Colors Beyond the Spectrum

The eyes and brain see many more colors than those of the visible light spectrum. For example, purple and magenta aren’t on the spectrum. They are the brain’s way of connecting red and purple. There are also desaturated and blended colors, such as pink and brown. Mixing pigments on a palette forms hues and tints that aren’t spectral colors.

References

  • Agoston, George A. (1979). Color Theory and Its Application in Art and Design. Berlin: Springer. doi:10.1007/978-3-662-15801-2
  • Bruno, Thomas J.; Svoronos, Paris D. N. (2005). CRC Handbook of Fundamental Spectroscopic Correlation Charts. CRC Press. ISBN 9781420037685.
  • Evans, Ralph M. (1974). The Perception of Color. New York: Wiley-Interscience. ISBN 978-0-471-24785-2.
  • McLaren, K. (March 2007). “Newton’s Indigo”. Color Research & Application. 10 (4): 225–229. doi:10.1002/col.5080100411