| Isaac Newton - 1730 - 432 pages
...be alfo Colours produced by Gompofitiony which are not fully like any of the Colours of hornogencal Light. FOR a Mixture of homogeneal red and yellow compounds an Orange, like in appeaI 2 ranee ranee of Colour to that orange which in the feries of unmixed prifmatick Colours lies... | |
| Isaac Newton - 1730 - 403 pages
...they ceafe^ and the Mixture becomes white or grey. T'here may be alfo Colours produced by Compojition^ 'which are not fully like any of the Colours of homog.eneal Light. FOR a Mixture of homogeneal red and yell6w compounds an Orange, like in appea! 2 " ranee 'ranee of Colour to that orange which in the feries... | |
| Robert Smith - 1738 - 402 pages
...they ceafe, and the mixture becomes white or grey. There may be alfo colours produced by compofition, which are not fully like any of the colours of homogeneal light. For a mixture of homogerieal red and yellow compounds an orange, like in appearance of colour ,tp that orange which... | |
| Arthur I. Rubin, Jacqueline Elder, United States. National Bureau of Standards - 1980 - 324 pages
...much Composition they may be diluted and weaken'd till they cease, and the Mixture becomes white or grey. There may be also Colours produced by Composition,...fully like any of the Colours of homogeneal Light. (ll) Whiteness and all grey Colours between white and black may be compounded of Colours, and the whiteness... | |
| 1980 - 344 pages
...much Composition they may be diluted and weaken'd till they cease, and the Mixture becomes white or grey. There may be also Colours produced by Composition,...fully like any of the Colours of homogeneal Light. (ll) Whiteness and all grey Colours between white and black may be compounded of Colours, and the whiteness... | |
| Arthur I. Rubin, Jacqueline Elder, United States. National Bureau of Standards - 1980 - 324 pages
...intercepted at any moment but the rapid succession gave white at W2 His reference to mixed colors, "which are not fully like any of the Colours of homogeneal Light," was, of course, to the purple.' since all color mixtures will lie within the triangle formed by them.... | |
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