Blue

Blue
 
Color Coordinates
Hex triplet #0000FF
RGB (r, g, b) (0, 0, 255)
CMYK (c, m, y, k) N (100, 100, 0, 0)
HSV (h, s, v) (240°, 100%, 100%)
  N: Normalised to [ 0–255 ] (changing to [0–100])

Blue (from Old High German "blao" shining) is one of the three primary additive colors; blue light has the shortest wavelength range (about 420-490 nm) of the three primary colors.

A clear sky on a sunny day is colored blue, because of Rayleigh scattering of the light from the Sun. Large amounts of water (H2O) look blue because red light around 750 nm is absorbed as an overtone of the O-H stretching vibration. Interestingly, heavy water (D2O) is colorless, because the absorption band (~950 nm) is outside the visible spectrum.

An example of a blue color in the RGB color space has intensities [0, 0, 255] on a 0 to 255 scale. Blue is the complement of yellow. For this reason, blue 80A filters are used to correct for the excessive redness of tungsten lighting in color photography.

The English language commonly uses "blue" to refer to any color from blue to cyan. Many languages do not have separate terms for blue and green, and in the Swedish language, blue was also used for black until the early 20th century.

Contents

Use, symbolism and colloquial expressions

Nationally

Vocations

Politics

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Blue_house.jpg
A house painted blue


A house painted blue

Use in Music

Use in painting

Traditionally, blue has been considered as a primary color in painting, with the secondary color orange as its complement, but this is not consistent with modern scientific color theory. As the mixing of pigments is a subtractive color process, the true primary colors in painting and printing are cyan, magenta and yellow (with black often added for practical reasons; see CMYK color model).

Use in Statistics

BLUE is an acronym for the Best Linear Unbiased Estimator.

See also

External links

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Wiktionary.png


Look up Blue in Wiktionary, the free dictionary


Electromagnetic Spectrum

Radio waves | Microwave | Terahertz radiation | Infrared | Optical spectrum | Ultraviolet | X-ray | Gamma ray


Visible: Red | Orange | Yellow | Green | Blue | Indigo | Violet

Web colors black silver gray white red maroon purple fuchsia green lime olive yellow orange blue navy teal aqua
                                 

See also: Blue, 1860, 1990s, 20th century, Air force