Color
or colour is the visual perceptual property corresponding
in humans to the categories called red, green, blue
and others. Color derives from the spectrum of light
(distribution of light energy versus wavelength) interacting
in the eye with the spectral sensitivities of the light
receptors.
Dominant
wavelength Chart

Dominant/complementary wavelength example on
the CIE color space
The "x" marks the color in question. For the
white point indicated, the dominant wavelength for "x"
is on the nearer perimeter, around 600 nm, while the
complementary wavelength is opposite, around 485 nm.
Intuitively, the dominant wavelength of "x"
corresponds to the primary hue of "x".In color
science, the dominant wavelength and complementary wavelength
are ways of describing non-spectral (polychromatic)
light mixtures in terms of the spectral (monochromatic)
light that evokes an identical perception of hue.
Dominant
wavelength Spectral Light
The
dominant wavelength and complementary wavelength are
ways of describing non-spectral (polychromatic) light
mixtures in terms of the spectral (monochromatic) light
that evokes an identical perception of hue. This is
a color science regarding the light and how it is dispersed
in LEDs used in our Xmultiple connectors.
The
International Commission on Illumination (usually abbreviated
CIE for its French name, Commission internationale de
l'eclairage) is the international authority on light,
illumination, color, and color spaces.
A
straight line drawn between the point for a given color
and the point for the color of the illuminant can be
extrapolated out so that it intersects the perimeter
of the space in two points which is on the CIE color
coordinate space, The point of intersection nearer to
the color in question reveals the dominant wavelength
of the color as the wavelength of the pure spectral
color at that intersection point. The point of intersection
on the opposite side of the color space gives the complementary
wavelength, which when added to the color in question
in the right proportion will yield the color of the
illuminant. The lluminant point is between these points
on a straight line in CIE space.
In
situations where no particular illuminant is specified,
it is common to discuss dominant wavelength in terms
of some standard (usually white) illuminant, such as
flat spectrum white light. For the purposes of this
geometrical discussion, an analogy may be observed between
the horseshoe shaped CIE 1931 color space and a circular
slice of HSV color space, where the CIE flat spectrum
white point at (1/3,1/3) is analogous to the HSV white
point at (0,0). This comparison clarifies the derivation
of the ideas of hue and complementary color common in
uses of the HSV space.
Color is commonly a psychological perception thought
of as a function of the power spectrum of light frequencies
impinging on the photoreceptors of the retina. In the
simplest case of pure spectral light (also known as
monochromatic), the spectrum of the light has power
only in one narrow frequency band peak. For these simple
stimuli, there exists a continuum of perceived colors
which changes as the frequency of the narrow band peak
is changed. This is the well known rainbow spectrum,
which ranges from red at one end to blue and violet
at the other (corresponding respectively to the long-wavelength
and short-wavelength extremes of the visible range of
electromagnetic radiation).
Light
in the natural world is almost never purely monochromatic;
most natural light sources and reflected light from
natural objects comprise spectra that have complex profiles,
with varying power over many different frequencies.
A naive perspective might be that therefore all these
different complex spectra would generate color perceptions
completely different from those evoked in the rainbow
of pure spectral light. One can perhaps see intuitively
that this is not correct: almost all hues in the natural
world (purples being the exception, see below) are represented
in the pure rainbow spectrum, although they may be darker
or less saturated than they appear in the rainbow. How
is it that all the complex spectra in the natural world
can be condensed to hues in the rainbow, which only
represents simple monochromatic band peak spectra? This
is the result of the design of the eye: the three color
photoreceptors in the retina (the cones) reduce the
information in the light spectrum down to three activity
coordinates. Thus, many different physical light spectra
converge psychologically to the same perceived color.
In effect, for any single color perception, there is
a whole parametric space in the power/frequency domain
that maps to that one color.
For
many power distributions of natural light, the set of
spectra mapping to the same color perception also includes
a stimulus that is a narrow band at a single frequency;
i.e. a pure spectral light (usually with some flat spectrum
white light added to desaturate). The wavelength of
this pure spectral light that will evoke the same color
perception as the given complicated light mixture is
the dominant wavelength of that mixture.
Note
that since purples (mixtures of red and blue/violet)
cannot be pure spectral colors, no color mixture perceived
as purple in hue can be assigned a proper dominant wavelength.
However, purple mixtures can be assigned a dominant
hue as coordinates along the line of pure purples. See
CIE for the standard representation of color space,
where the border is composed of a horseshoe curve representing
the pure spectral colors, with a straight line completing
the perimeter along the bottom and representing the
mixtures of extreme red and blue/violet that give the
pure purples. The same argument applies to complementary
colors; for many coordinates in the green area of CIE
color space, no complementary wavelength exists, but
there is a complementary pure purple.
The information on Dominant Wavelength has been provided
by the from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Please
visit the Wikipedia website for more information regarding
color spectrum and how it works.