Color Curiosity Shop Example Page
whyiscolor.org
3 - 4
(Level:3 - Topic:4,Numbers)
How many colors are there in the world?
There are just 24 crayons in
this box, but imagine all the
colors you can make with
them, some creativity, and
different objects to color on.
Sun dogs on each side of the
rising sun are caused by ice
crystals in the sky on a very
cold morning. Dispersion of
light in the ice crystals also
produces the rainbows. Since
there are ice crystals in the air
between the barn and the
camera, the rainbow is also
visible in front of the barn.
There are many colors in this
scene, produced in many
different ways — lights,
objects, and scattering
volumes.
The best answer is infinity!
Careful measurements of our visual system’s best performance have been
made by psychophysicists (people who study human responses, like seeing
color, to things in the world, like light). They have shown that we can see
about 1000 levels of light-dark, 100 levels of red-green, and 100 levels of
yellow-blue for a single viewing condition in a laboratory. This means that
the total number of colors we can see is about 1000 x 100 x 100 = 10,000,000
(10 million). A computer displays about 16.8 million colors to create fullcolor
pictures, really more than necessary for most situations.
However, the answer is not quite so simple. What color looks like is greatly
affected by the viewing conditions. These conditions include the color of
the lighting, the amount of lighting, and other colors in the scene. Colors
also appear in different modes when they appear on different objects such
as surfaces, light sources, or within volumes. Different people also have
slight differences in the way they see color.
Since we can see at least 10-million colors in a single viewing condition and
the variety of viewing conditions and observers is endless, then the only
truly correct answer is infinity. If we have 10-million colors, times 10-
million lighting types, times 10-million lighting levels, times 10-million
surrounding colors, times 6-billion people in the world, times 3 modes of
viewing we get a really huge number. The result of that multiplication is 18
followed by 33 zeros (18,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000), or 18
decillion. That might not quite be infinity, but is close enough since all
those estimated numbers are probably on the low side. And there is no way
to exactly measure each of them. To learn more about the names of really
big numbers, visit www.jimloy.com/math/billion.htm.
Photos: M. Fairchild
2007-06-07 16:26:07
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answer #1
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answered by princess 2
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12
2007-06-07 16:21:54
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answer #2
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answered by living.deadchick 3
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there are 3 primary colors:
red
blue
green
there are 4 colors that come from mixing the 3 primary:
yellow
magenta
cyan
white
from there the number goes to infinity
2007-06-07 16:32:39
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answer #3
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answered by oldguy 6
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an excellent type of the earth's floor is roofed in water, that's blue, and the sky is blue besides, so in case you could desire to compliment a coloration consistent with floor section or the colour maximum huge-unfold, you could desire to compliment blue!
2016-11-27 01:02:48
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answer #4
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answered by pao 4
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theres 3 real colors the rest are just those 3 mixed together
Yellow
Red
Blue
2007-06-07 16:26:58
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answer #5
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answered by froggyreba 3
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3 Yellow blue and red. All others are combinations of these three.
2007-06-07 16:24:08
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answer #6
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answered by mark b 4
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man, you know me tooooo well, I was one of the "endless possibilities crap"
oh well, how bout 6 basics.
2007-06-07 16:24:05
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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there are only 3 primary colors.....Yellow, Blue, and Red
everything else derives from it
and black and white are neutrals....so they arent considered colors.....=P
2007-06-07 16:22:59
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answer #8
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answered by ♥D 2
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4,096 on the color cube in the link below!!! Amazing!
2007-06-07 16:23:46
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answer #9
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answered by ? 6
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red
orange
yellow
green
blue
indigo
violet
2007-06-07 16:24:48
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answer #10
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answered by st. longinus 2
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