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Spectral color

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Color evoked by a single wavelength of light in the visible spectrum

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Arainbow is adecomposition of white light intoall of the spectral colors.
Laser beams are monochromatic light, thereby exhibiting spectral colors.

Aspectral color is acolor that is evoked bymonochromatic light, i.e. either aspectral line with a singlewavelength orfrequency oflight in thevisible spectrum, or a relatively narrowspectral band (e.g.lasers). Every wave of visible light is perceived as a spectral color; when viewed as acontinuous spectrum, these colors are seen as the familiarrainbow.Non-spectral colors (orextra-spectral colors) are evoked by a combination of spectral colors.

In color spaces

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The spectrum colors are the colors on the horseshoe-shaped curve on the outside of the diagram. All other colors are not spectral: the bottom line istheline of purples, whilst within the interior of the diagram are unsaturated colors that are various mixtures of a spectral color or a purple color withwhite, a grayscale color. White is in the central part of the interior of the diagram, sincewhen all colors of light are mixed together, they produce white.

Incolor spaces which include all, or most spectral colors, they form a part of boundary of the set of all real colors. When considering a three-dimensional color space (which includesluminance), the spectral colors form asurface. When excluding luminance and considering a two-dimensional color space (chromaticity diagram), the spectral colors form acurve known as thespectral locus. For example, the spectral locus of theCIE xy chromaticity diagram contains all the spectral colors (to the eye of the standard observer).

A trichromatic color space is defined by threeprimary colors, which can theoretically be spectral colors. In this case, all other colors are inherently non-spectral. In reality, the spectral bandwidth of most primaries means that most color spaces are entirely non-spectral. Due to different chromaticity properties of different spectral segments, and also due to practical limitations of light sources, the actualdistance between RGB purecolor wheel colors and spectral colors shows a complicated dependence on thehue. Due to the location of R and G primaries near the 'almost flat' spectral segment,RGB color space is reasonably good with approximating spectral orange, yellow, andbright (yellowish) green,but is especially poor in reproducing the visual appearance of spectral colors in the vicinity of central green, and between green and blue, as well as extreme spectral colors approachingIR orUV.

Spectral colors are universally included inscientific color spaces such as CIE 1931, but industrial and consumer color spaces/models such as sRGB, CMYK, andPantone, do not typically include any spectral colors. Exceptions includeRec. 2020, which uses three spectral colors as primaries (and therefore only includes precisely those three spectral colors), and color spaces such as theProPhoto RGB color space which use imaginary colors as primaries.

In color spaces such asCIELUV, a spectral color has maximalsaturation. InHelmholtz coordinates, this is described as 100%purity.

In dichromatic color spaces

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Indichromaticcolor vision there is no distinction between spectral and non-spectral colors. Their entire gamut can be represented by spectral colors.[note 1]

Spectral color terms

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The spectrum is often divided intocolor terms or names, but aligning boundaries between color terms to a specific wavelength is very subjective.

The first person to decompose white light and name the spectral colors wasIsaac Newton, in the 1660s.[1] Early in the study of radiometry, Newton was not able to measure the wavelength of the light, but his experiments were repeated contemporarily to estimate wavelengths where his color term boundaries probably lay.[2]Newton's color terms included red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet; this color sequence is still used to describe spectral colors colloquially and amnemonic for it is commonly known as "Roy G. Biv".

In modern divisions of the spectrum,indigo is often omitted and ablue-green color is sometimes included. Some have argued that Newton's indigo would be equivalent to our modern blue, and his blue equivalent to our blue-green. However, his nonintuitive choices can be better explained. In the table below, note how wavelength is not proportional to hue (which is approximately perceptually uniform). Color systems such asISCC-NBS attempt to divide the spectrum into sections that appear perceptually uniform. On the other hand, Newton's sections are approximately uniform in size as they would have physically appeared in the diffracted spectrum, i.e. each about 40nm "wide". In this theory, the sections were divided without influence of his own perception, and each section was then given a name that best suited itsaverage color. In contrast, the sections in theISCC-NBS spectrum vary greatly in wavelength range, but are more consistent in thehue degree range. Both instances deviate from thebasic color terms used in English, only some of which are spectral colors.

The table below includes several definitions where the spectral colors have been categorized incolor terms. Thehue that a given monochromatic light evokes is approximated at the right side of the table.

Spectral color classifications
nmNewton*[2]ISCC-NBS*[3]Malacara[4]CRC Handbook[5]Hue*
380VioletVioletVioletViolet250°
390250°
400250°
410249°
420249°
430IndigoBlue249°
440Blue247°
450BlueBlue245°
460242°
470238°
480226°
490GreenBlue-Green190°
500GreenCyanGreen143°
510126°
520Green122°
530Yellow117°
540113°
550Yellow-Green104°
56093°
570YellowYellow62°
580OrangeYellowOrange28°
590OrangeOrange14°
600
610Red
620RedRed
630Red
640
650
660
670
680
690
700
710
720
730
740
750

Extra-spectral colors

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Among some of the colors that arenot spectral colors are:

  • Grayscale (achromatic) colors, such aswhite,gray, andblack.
  • Any color obtained by mixing a gray-scale color and another real color (either spectral or not), such aspink (a mixture of areddish color and white), orbrown (a mixture oforange and black or gray).
  • Violet-red colors, which include colors in theline of purples (such asmagenta androse), and other variations of purple and red.
  • Impossible colors, which cannot be seen under normal viewing of light, such as over-saturated colors or colors that are seemingly brighter than white.
  • Metallic colors which reflect light by effect.

Notes

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  1. ^This is true for dichromats withphotoreceptor cells with overlappingspectral sensitivity curves. If the spectral sensitivity curves do not overlap, then all colors (except the ones that only excite one type of conecell) would be non-spectral. However, there are no known vision systems where thecones' spectral sensitivity curves do not overlap.

References

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  1. ^"Newton and the Science of Color".Columbia Science Review. RetrievedMay 2, 2025.
  2. ^abMcLaren, K. (1985). "Newton's indigo".Color Research & Application.10 (4):225–229.doi:10.1002/col.5080100411.
  3. ^Kelly, Kenneth L. (November 1, 1943). "Color Designations for Lights".Journal of the Optical Society of America.33 (11): 627.doi:10.1364/JOSA.33.000627.
  4. ^Malacara, Daniel (2011).Color vision and colorimetry : theory and applications (2nd ed.). Bellingham, Wash.: SPIE.ISBN 9780819483973.
  5. ^Bruno, Thomas J. (2006).CRC handbook of fundamental spectroscopic correlation charts. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press.ISBN 9780849332500.
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