Yellow: Difference between revisions
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{{Wiktionary}} |
{{Wiktionary}} |
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[[Image:Yellow tulip.JPG|thumb|A yellow [[Tulip]].|200 px]] |
[[Image:Yellow tulip.JPG|thumb|A yellow [[Tulip]].|200 px]] |
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'''Yellow''' is the [[color]] evoked by light that stimulates both the '''L''' and '''M''' (long- and medium-wavelength) [[cone cells]] of the [[retina]] about equally, but does not significantly stimulate the '''S''' (short-wavelength) cone cells; that is, light with lots of [[red]] and [[green]] but not much [[blue]].<ref>{{cite book | title = Introduction to Psychology | author = James W. Kalat | isbn = 053462460X | year = 2005 | publisher = Thomson Wadsworth | page = 105 | url = http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0534624626&id=AHBnar7sEIIC&pg=PA105&lpg=PA105&ots=m3Lzw8xCgQ&dq=yellow-light+long+medium+short+cones&sig=13IGJmaW6EZQPq3yadyxP5ds_QY}}</ref> Light with a wavelength of 570–580 [[nanometre|nm]] is yellow, as is light with a suitable mixture of somewhat longer and shorter wavelengths. Yellow's traditional [[RYB]] [[complementary color]] is [[violet (color)|violet]] or [[purple]], yellow's colorimetrically defined complementary color in both [[RGB]] and [[CMYK]] color spaces is [[blue]]. <!--Discuss blue/violet info on talk page.--> |
'''Yellow''' is the [[color]] evoked by light that stimulates both the '''L''' and '''M''' (long- and medium-wavelength) [[cone cells]] of the [[retina]] about equally, but does not significantly stimulate the '''S''' (short-wavelength) cone cells; that is, light with lots of [[red]] and [[green]] but not much [[blue]].<ref>{{cite book | title = Introduction to Psychology | author = James W. Kalat | isbn = 053462460X | year = 2005 | publisher = Thomson Wadsworth | page = 105 | url = http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0534624626&id=AHBnar7sEIIC&pg=PA105&lpg=PA105&ots=m3Lzw8xCgQ&dq=yellow-light+long+medium+short+cones&sig=13IGJmaW6EZQPq3yadyxP5ds_QY}}</ref> Light with a wavelength of 570–580 [[nanometre|nm]] is yellow, as is light with a suitable mixture of somewhat longer and shorter wavelengths. Yellow's traditional [[RYB]] [[complementary color]] is [[violet (color)|violet]] or [[purple]], yellow's colorimetrically defined complementary color in both [[RGB]] and [[CMYK]] color spaces is [[blue]]. Yellow is also a symbol for gay men around the universe. Many believe, including Albert Einstein himself, that this color actually converted heterosexual men to gayness, or, more scientificly known as homosexual. For more information, refer to [[transfestites]].<!--Discuss blue/violet info on talk page.--> |
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==Variations of yellow== |
==Variations of yellow== |
Revision as of 19:37, 16 November 2007
Yellow is the color evoked by light that stimulates both the L and M (long- and medium-wavelength) cone cells of the retina about equally, but does not significantly stimulate the S (short-wavelength) cone cells; that is, light with lots of red and green but not much blue.[1] Light with a wavelength of 570–580 nm is yellow, as is light with a suitable mixture of somewhat longer and shorter wavelengths. Yellow's traditional RYB complementary color is violet or purple, yellow's colorimetrically defined complementary color in both RGB and CMYK color spaces is blue. Yellow is also a symbol for gay men around the universe. Many believe, including Albert Einstein himself, that this color actually converted heterosexual men to gayness, or, more scientificly known as homosexual. For more information, refer to transfestites.
Variations of yellow
Yellow | |
---|---|
Color coordinates | |
Hex triplet | #FFFF00 |
sRGBB (r, g, b) | (255, 255, 0) |
HSV (h, s, v) | (60°, 100%, 100%) |
CIELChuv (L, C, h) | (97, 107, 86°) |
Source | HTML/CSS[2] |
B: Normalized to [0–255] (byte) |
Process yellow
Process yellow (also known as pigment yellow, printer's yellow or canary yellow) is one of the three colors typically used as subtractive primary colors, along with magenta and cyan. The CMYK system for color printing is based on using four inks, one of which is a yellow color. This is not in itself a standard color, though a fairly narrow range of yellow inks or pigments are used. Process yellow is based on a colorant that reflects the preponderance of red and green light, and absorbs most blue light, as in the reflectance spectra shown in the figure to the right.
Because of the characteristics of paint pigments and use of different color wheels, painters traditionally regard the complement of yellow as the color indigo or blue-violet.
Process yellow is not an RGB color, and there is no fixed conversion from CMYK primaries to RGB. Different formulations are used for printer's ink, so there can be variations in the printed color that is pure yellow ink.
Complements of yellow
Hunt[3] defines that "two colors are complementary when it is possible to reproduce the tristimulus values of a specified achromatic stimulus by an additive mixture of these two stimuli." That is, when two colored lights can be mixed to match a specified white (achromatic, non-colored) light, the colors of those two lights are complementary. This definition, however, does not constrain what version of white will be specified. In the nineteenth century, the scientists Grassmann and Helmholtz did experiments in which they concluded that finding a good complement for spectral yellow was difficult, but that the result was indigo, that is, a wavelength that today's color scientists would call violet. Helmholtz says "Yellow and indigo blue" are complements.[4] Grassman reconstructs Newton's category boundaries in terms of wavelengths and says "This indigo therefore falls within the limits of color between which, according to Helmholtz, the complementary colors of yellow lie."[5] Newton's own color circle has yellow directly opposite the boundary between indigo and violet. These results, that the complement of yellow is a wavelength shorter than 450 nm, are derivable from the modern CIE 1931 system of colorimetry if it is assumed that the yellow is about 580 nm or shorter wavelength, and the specified white is the color of a blackbody radiator of temperature 2800 K or lower (that is, the white of an ordinary incandescent light bulb). More typically, with a daylight-colored or around 5000 to 6000 K white, the complement of yellow will be in the blue wavelength range, which is the standard modern answer for the complement of yellow.
Plants and animals
- The yellow birch (Betula alleghaniensis) is a birch species native to eastern North America, from Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and southern Quebec west to Minnesota, and south in the Appalachian Mountains to northern Georgia. They are medium-sized deciduous trees and can reaching about 20 m tall, trunks up to 80 cm in diameter. The bark is smooth and yellow-bronze and the wood is extensively used for flooring, cabinetry, and toothpicks.
- Yellow-breasted Chats (Icteria virens) are large foraging songbird found in southern parts of Canada, the United States, Mexico, and Central America. They are olive with a white bellies and a yellow throat and breast, with a long tail, a thick heavy bill, a large white eye ring, and dark legs.
- A yellow-fever mosquito is a mosquito in the Aedes genus, so named because they transmit dengue fever and yellow fever, the mosquito-born viruses.
- Yellow-green alga, also called xanthophytes, are a class of algae in the Heterokontophyta division. Most live in freshwater, but some are found in marine and soil habitats. They vary from single-celled flagellates to simple colonial and filamentousforms. Unlike other heterokonts, yellow-green algae's chloroplasts do not contain fucoxanthin, which is why they have a lighter color.
- The Yellowhammer (Emberiza citrinella) is a passerine in the bunting family Emberizidae. It breeds across Europe and much of Asia. Most yellowhammers are resident, but some far northern birds migrate south in winter. It is common in all sorts of open areas with some scrub or trees. They are large with a thick seed-eater's bill. The males have a bright yellow head, yellow underparts, and a heavily streaked brown back. Females are much duller and more streaked below.
- Yellowjackets are black-and-yellow wasps of the genus Vespula or Dolichovespula (though some can be black-and-white, the most notable of these being the bald-faced hornet, Dolichovespula maculata). They can be identified by their distinctive black-and-yellow color, small size (slightly larger than a bee), and entirely black antennae.
- Yellow poplar is a common name for Liriodendron, the tuliptree. The name is inaccurate as this genus is not related to poplars.
- The Yellow-shafted Flicker (Colaptes auratus) is a large woodpecker species of eastern North America. They have yellow shafts on their wing and tail feathers.
- Yellowtail is the common name for dozens of different fish species that have yellow tails or a yellow body.
- Goldenrod is a yellow flowering plant in the Family Asteraceae
Yellow in human culture
This article needs additional citations for verification. (May 2007) |
This article possibly contains original research. (September 2007) |
- Stars of spectral class G, such as our sun Sol, have a color temperature that we characterize as "yellowish".
- The planet Saturn is yellowish, like a class G star.
Cultural associations
- Yellow is a bright, cheerful color, often associated with happiness and peace.
- In the English language, yellow has traditionally been associated with jaundice and cowardice. In American slang, a coward is said to be "yellowbellied" or "yellow".
- In Hindu mythology it is considered that yellow has the power to influence the intellect.
- In ancient China, yellow was the symbol of Centre and Earth, one of the main five colors.
- In South Korea the color yellow is associated with jealousy.
- Near the end of the 19th century, the color yellow was often associated with mental illness, specifically including insanity, and with other sorts of mental problems (e.g. depravity). Examples include The Yellow Book, The Yellow Wallpaper, The King in Yellow, and The Yellow Sign.
- In Chinese culture, yellow is associated with royalty, as it is also in southeast Asia. In China, commoners were not allowed to wear yellow until modern times.
- In the Malay the term budaya kuning (lit. "yellow culture") is used to refer to lewd or uncouth behaviour, with the implication that such culture is an import from Western societies.
- There is a yellow smile, in Arab culture, which is an ingenuine smile. A yellow smile is used when a person is concealing lack of interest, fear, or any emotion he wishes to keep hidden. It is sometimes used as a joke, by making a face of a crooked, ingenuine smile, when somebody tells a bad joke or is trying to make others laugh for something they do not find humorous enough.
- "Yellow" ("giallo"), in Italy, refers to crime stories, both fictional and real. This association began about in 1930 because the first series of crime novels published in Italy had a yellow cover.
- There is also a French expression "rire jaune" ("yellow laughter") which could be translated into English as "mirthless laughter", laughing without mirth, laughing when you don't find the joke funny, or when the joke is directed at you.
- Pencils are often painted yellow because of the association of this color with China, where the best graphite is found; in the past, only pencils with Chinese graphite used to be painted yellow.[citation needed]
Yellow is associated with Monday on the Thai solar calendar. Anyone may wear yellow on Mondays, and anyone born on a Monday may adopt yellow as their color. The best-known personage associated with this color is the current king, Bhumibol Adulyadej. Ever since the political crisis of 2005-2006, during the events of the 2006 Thai coup d'état, in honor of the 60th anniversary of his accession to the throne and continuing until his 80th birthday celebration on 5 December 2007, Thailand has been a veritable sea of yellow as the people of Thailand show support for their king.
- in the electronic color code, yellow signifies the numeral 4. This is most frequently seen in the markings for resistors, but is also seen in ribbon cables.
- Asian people are sometimes referred to as the yellow race. The use of "yellow" to refer to people of East Asian descent is usually regarded as offensive today in most contexts. In the 20th-century United States, immigrants from China and other East Asian nations were derogatorily referred to as a "yellow peril."
- The Yellowknife tribe were a Canadian First Nations tribe. The Yellowknife River and the city Yellowknife (the capital of the Northwest Territories) are named after the tribe.
- Yellow Bird was a chief of the Walla Walla tribe.
- Mustard yellow is the color of the belt awarded to the winner of the Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest at Nathan's Famous in Coney Island, New York.
- The Yellow Rose of Texas, Rosa 'Harison's Yellow', first bloomed in New York City in the 1830s.
- The legendary first emperor of China was known as the Yellow Emperor or Huang Di (Chinese: 黃帝, Simplified Chinese: 黄帝).
- As such, yellow was the symbol for the Emperor of China.
- The Yellow Turbans were a Daoist sect that staged an extensive rebellion during the Han Dynasty.
- Yellow bug lights are used on front or back porches of houses because they do not attract insects as much as other colors.
- "Yellow journalism" was sensationalist journalism that distorts, exaggerates, or exploits news to maximize profit. The term came from Joseph Pulitzer's New York World and William Randolph Hearst's New York Journal American, who engaged in sensational reporting during the late 19th and early 20th century, most famously during the Spanish-American War. The term was derived from the color comic strip The Yellow Kid, which appeared in both papers.
- Yellow is associated with hepatitis A, since someone who has that disease turns yellow.
- "Yellow" is 20th Century American drug slang for Nembutal, a barbiturate. This is due to the yellow color of the pills.
- On the United States Army and in many commonwealth countries, yellow is the color of cavalry - cavalry uniforms often include a yellow stripe down the side of each leg.
- Yellowcake (also known as urania and uranic oxide) is concentrated uranium oxide, obtained through the milling of uranium ore. Yellowcake is used in the preparation of fuel for nuclear reactors and in uranium enrichment, one of the essential steps for creating nuclear weapons.
- The March 1967 album by Donovan called Mellow Yellow was very popular among the hippies. The featured song on the album, Mellow Yellow, popularized during the Spring of 1967 a widely believed hoax that it was possible to get high by smoking scrapings from the inside of banana peels, although this rumor was actually started in 1966 by a different musician popular among the hippies, Country Joe McDonald.
- Yellow Submarine is a 1966 song by the Beatles (written by the Lennon-McCartney duo) and the theme song for the 1968 animated United Artists film based on the music of the Beatles.
- Yellow Bird is a famous song from Jamaica. The most popular recording was the one done by Lawrence Welk
- Yellow is a song written by Coldplay. It appeared on Parachutes in 2000 and reached #4 on the UK Singles Charts.
- In the metaphysics of the New Age Prophetess, Alice A. Bailey, in her system called the Seven Rays which classifies humans into seven different metaphysical personality types, the fourth ray of harmony through conflict is represented by the color yellow. People who have this metaphysical personality type are said to be on the Yellow Ray.
- Yellow is used to symbolically represent the third (Manipura) chakra.
- Psychics who claim to be able to observe the aura with their third eye report that someone with a yellow aura is typically someone who is in an occupation requiring intellectual acumen, such as a scientist. [6]
- In Christianity, yellow represents the deadly sin Greed.
- In Buddhism, yellow (actually, the color saffron) is commonly used in conjunction with red, orange , and brown by the monks. The Buddha wore yellow robes after Enlightenment.
- Yellow was also the color of the New Party in the Republic of China (Taiwan), which supports Chinese reunification.
- In the United States, a Yellow Dog Democrat was a Southern voter who consistently voted for Democratic candidates in the late 19th and early 20th centuries because of lingering resentment against the Republicans dating back to the Civil War and Reconstruction period. Today the term refers to a hard-core Democrat, supposedly referring to a person who would vote for a "yellow dog" before voting for a Republican.
- In some countries, yellow symbolizes classical liberalism or libertarianism. The yellow-and-black flag is used by some anarcho-capitalists.
- Communists of all sorts use yellow in conjunction with red. This is especially noticeable with the yellow hammer and sickle within a red star that was commonly seen in as a symbol of the Soviet Union. While red signified the blood of the workers, yellow seems to have no special meaning in this context. It could mean that the hammer and sickle (symbols of the industrial workers and the agricultural workers) are the weapons of the working class, and are stained yellow after being used to defeat the bourgeoisie during the revolution.
- In Association football (soccer), the referee shows a yellow card to indicate that a player has been officially cautioned.
- In Association football (soccer), the Yellows is a nickname for Oxford United football club, whose shirts are usually yellow.
- In American Football, a yellow flag is thrown onto the field by a referee to indicate a penalty.
- Originally in Rugby League and then later, also in Rugby Union, the referee shows a yellow card to indicate that a player has been sent to the sin bin.
- In auto racing, a yellow flag signals caution. Cars are not allowed to pass one another under a yellow flag.
- In cycle racing, the yellow jersey - or maillot jaune - is awarded to the leader in a stage race. The tradition was begun in the Tour de France where the sponsoring L'Auto newspaper (later L'Équipe) was printed on distinctive yellow newsprint.
- In some countries, taxicabs are commonly yellow. This practice began in Chicago, where taxi entrepreneur John Hertz painted his taxis yellow based on a University of Chicago study alleging that yellow is the color most easily seen at a distance.
- In Canada and the United States, school buses are almost uniformly painted a yellow color (often referred to as "school bus yellow") for purposes of visibility and safety, and British bus operators such as FirstGroup plc are attempting to introduce the concept there.
- "Caterpillar yellow" and "high-visibility yellow" are used for highway construction equipment.
- In the United Kingdom, railway locomotives and multiple units typically have part or all of their ends painted yellow, for visibility.
- In the rules of the road, yellow (called "amber" in Britain) is a traffic light signal warning that the period in which passage is permitted is coming to an end. It is intermediate between green (go) and red (stop). In railway signaling, yellow is often the color for warning, slow down, such as with distant signals.
- Several light rail and rapid transit lines on various public transportation have a Yellow Line.
- In International maritime signal flags a yellow flag denotes the letter "Q". It also means a ship asserts that she does not need to be Quarantined.
Yellow pigments
- Cadmium Yellow
- Chrome yellow
- Gamboge
- Indian Yellow
- Naples Yellow
- Yellow ochre
- Orpiment
- Titanium yellow
See also
References
This article needs additional citations for verification. (February 2007) |
- ^ James W. Kalat (2005). Introduction to Psychology. Thomson Wadsworth. p. 105. ISBN 053462460X.
- ^ W3C TR CSS3 Color Module, HTML4 color keywords
- ^ J. W. G. Hunt (1980). Measuring Color. Ellis Horwood Ltd. ISBN 0-7458-0125-0.
- ^ Hermann von Helmholtz (1924). Physiological Optics. Dover.
- ^ Hermann Günter Grassman (1854). "Theory of Compound Colors". Philosophical Magazine. Vol. 4: 254–264.
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has extra text (help) - ^ Swami Panchadasi The Human Aura: Astral Colors and Thought Forms Des Plaines, Illinois, USA:1912--Yogi Publications Society Page 33