Secondary color is formed by the sum of two primary colors of equal intensity
Answers
The statement is true.
The RGB colour model is an additive colour model. In this red, green and blue lights are added together in different ways to produce a broad array of colours.
A secondary colour is formed by the sum of two primary colours of equal intensity. For instance, cyan is green + blue, yellow is red + green, and magenta is red + blue. Each secondary colour is the complement of a primary colour. When a primary and its complementary secondary colour are added together we get white colour: cyan complements red, yellow complements blue and magenta complements green.
The answer is True.
A secondary color is formed by mixing two primary colors of equal intensities or in the same proportion. There are three additive primary colors – red, green and blue. Some examples of secondary colors formed as a combination of two primary colors are:
*Magenta = Red + Blue
*Yellow = Red + Green
*Cyan = Green + Blue
Interestingly, when a primary color is combined with a secondary color, the resultant color is white.