Everyone is probably familiar with the white noise or snow that
can appear on an analogue television screen. I know this comes from
electronic noise and stray electromagnetic signals, but television
signals encode colour information, so how come this random noise always
shows up as white?
Flowers co-evolved with their pollinators: that is why they find flowers
attractive. This arrangement works to the benefit of both parties, so
do humans get any similar benefits from liking flowers? The plants do,
in that gardeners propagate them.
Come to think of it, are other mammals
attracted to flowers?
For my 18th birthday I received a silver bracelet, with what I believed were amethyst or similar stones set into it.
However, the purple stones appeared blue under the flourescent lighting in the biology labs, and under another type of light seemed clear white. Once under sunlight the stones again appeared their normal purple colour. There was no gradual fade of colour - moving from one light to a window yielded instant change - and under normal lightbulbs the stones also appeared purple, and the same with any light mixed with sunshine.
Is this to do with how the stones were cut, how they reflect the light, or is the stone itself responsible?
One of my young chickens has just produced an unusually coloured
egg (to the right of the photo). The egg on the left is more typical of
the breed.
I know egg shell colour is variable, even in eggs laid by
the same hen on different days, but how did one egg undergo such a
sudden and distinct colour change?
Do we all perceive color the same way ? for example do we all see the same color green or is the word green or red or blue just names to tag how we perceive those color. If I switched eyes with someone he might see the grass the same way as I perceive the sky but still call it green even though for me it would be blue.
The same goes for colorblind people (those unfortunate to mix up colors) if they were brought up seeing the grass as we would see it red. He would say green to everything red if we were able to see through his eyes. It would rely on education then.
In my office we fill out a time sheet each week, which has a yellow background and must be printed out on a laser printer. I print mine in colour, but many colleagues print the sheet in black and white so the background colour comes out light grey. They claim this is more environmentally friendly. But I say there's no evidence that black ink has a higher environmental cost than yellow ink, so it makes no difference. Who is right?