Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#10
![]()
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Short Wave Sportfishing wrote:
Not really. The thinking was that the molecule Rhodopsin (The G protein involved with color vision (purple)) was not responsive to red wavelengths and that red was naturally the best color for night vision. As I understand it, and I'm willing to be proved wrong on this, higher frequency red is not necessarily the best color because of that very reason - you lose more far vision, depth perception change, color perception with red than blue/green. The lower blue/green (ok, let's just call it teal) can be used at higher intensity without damaging depth perception, far vision and color sense. That's why most instrument panels in cars and I believe aircraft, are in the blue/green spectrum around 525 millimicrons. As usual I oversimplified and reality is quite a bit more complex. Thanks for the help. -rick- |