On a sunny day, the world seems light and colourful because
our eyes are able to see differences in the wavelengths of light as different
colours. Some animals cannot do this and live in a colourless world. Sunlight
looks white or yellow to us, but is really a mixture of light of many different
colours. Coloured light is one of the things that makes objects look different
from one another. A tomato looks red because it reflects red light into our
eyes, while an apple looks green because it reflects green
light.
The colours of a rainbow are made when sunlight shines through
raindrops. When a ray of sunlight enters a raindrop, the tiny drop of water
splits up the white light into different colours. Although a rainbow usually
looks semicircular from the ground, it appears as a complete circle if you look
at it from an aeroplane.
When white light shines into a solid triangle of glass, called a
prism, the glass in the prism refracts or changes the direction of the light as
it passes through. Different colours of light are made by light of different
wavelengths. The prism bends the shorter, blue wavelengths of light more than
the longer, red wavelengths. This is how the prism splits white light into its
spectrum of colours.
The whole sky can look red at dawn or dusk when the Sun sits low on
the horizon. At these times of day, sunlight reaches your area of Earth only
after travelling through a thick layer of the atmosphere. Particles in the
atmosphere scatter the blue part of sunlight away from Earth. The sunlight and
sky seem to turn red because they are missing this blue light.
White light is made of an infinite number of different colours, from
violet at one end through to red at the other. This band of visible colours is
known as the spectrum. Light at the blue end has a shorter wavelength and
higher frequency than light at the red end. Most people can see only seven
distinct colours in the spectrum: red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and
violet.
Objects look coloured because they reflect or absorb the different
colours in white light. A golf ball looks white because it reflects all the
wavelengths of light that fall on it. A lemon absorbs all wavelengths of light
except yellow, which it reflects into our eyes. A black helmet absorbs all
wavelengths of light and reflects none, and so it looks dark to us.