tony p
567
The blue highlights on these watches are luminescent,
Apr 22, 2007,22:14 PM
...so a dark environment at depth would in fact improve contrast, not hinder it.
The colours at the shorter end of the wavelength spectrum should really penetrate less well through water, not better - due to a phenomenon known as Mies scattering. I'm not sure why the opposite is true here.
Why did they use blue instead of violet? My guess is that while violet can be perceived by the human retina, it's not well perceived. The retina has three different types of colour-sensing cone in it, each of which is maximally sensitive at a particular wavelength. The shortest of those three wavelengths corresponds to a colour we call "blue".
Hope this helps.
Regards
Tony P
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No there isn't
By: Asimut : April 22nd, 2007-07:42
and of course, not really necessary. No real need for 1000M rating too, I guess.... Cheers, Asi
Is blue last colour visible and so what anyway?
By: Velociphile - No longer in the building : April 22nd, 2007-09:35
I don't believe blue is the last colour visible, data I've seen from Googling is saying violet. And that agrees with my notion of the absorption corresponding to wavelength, i.e. the last colour of the rainbow wins. Is it about colour though? I'm not so s...
The blue highlights on these watches are luminescent,
By: tony p : April 22nd, 2007-22:14
...so a dark environment at depth would in fact improve contrast, not hinder it. The colours at the shorter end of the wavelength spectrum should really penetrate less well through water, not better - due to a phenomenon known as Mies scattering. I'm not ...
Women have more than Men....no?
By: MTF : April 23rd, 2007-04:23
Tony, I believe that women have 4 types of cone cells whereas men have only 3 types. Is this correct? So, how does a light blue dial colour work for female divers; if there were such things? Do they just divide the spectrum into 4 sections equally or do t...