Physics, asked by AnkurPathak6718, 1 year ago

Secondary color is formed by the sum of two primary colors of equal intensity

Answers

Answered by Chirpy
2

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.

Answered by writersparadise
5

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.
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