Colour Subtraction with Filters

Materials: ★★☆ Available in most school laboratories or specialist stores
Difficulty: ★☆☆ Can be easily done by most teenagers
Safety: ★☆☆ Minimal safety procedures required

Categories: Light

Alternative titles: Light Absorption and Transmission

Summary

Light filters and surfaces selectively transmit, reflect, or absorb different colors of light. This subtraction of colors explains why objects and filtered images appear in certain colors or may even appear black if no light is reflected or transmitted.

Procedure

  1. Shine white light through a colored filter (such as red, green, or blue cellophane). Observe which colors pass through and which are blocked.
  2. Try secondary filters (cyan, magenta, yellow) and notice that they transmit two primary colors while absorbing the third.
  3. Place objects of different colors behind the filters to see how their appearance changes.
  4. Direct white light onto colored surfaces and observe which colors are reflected and which are absorbed.
  5. Compare results with white and black surfaces: white reflects all colors, while black absorbs all colors.

Colour Filter Demonstration - Physics with Simon Poliakoff:


📄 Colour subtraction, absorption and reflection - BBC Bitesize: https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/articles/z6mpywx#zwwmh4jv

Variations

Safety Precautions

Questions to Consider