Why We See Colors on an Oily Puddle

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Title Why We See Colors on an Oily Puddle
Description An oil slick looks colored because of a phenomenon called interference. If the reflections of light striking the top and bottom layer of the oil are in phase (the peaks and troughs of the waves coincide) the lightwaves will reinforce each other; if they are out of phase (the peaks of the light from one reflection coincide with the troughs of the other), they will cancel each other. So, if the thickness of an oil film is, for example, 540 nanmeters (the wavelength of green light), then the two reflections of the greenish light will be in phase, as shown in the diagram, and add, and the two reflections of other wavelengths will be out of phase and interfere, so the slick will look greenish.
Subject Color Theory
Form diagram
Classes ART 3010: The Language of Color
Source Vision and Art: The Biology of Seeing, by Margaret Livingstone. Abrams, New York, 2002.
Work ID 12712
Rights Digital Image Copyright University of Utah
ARK ark:/87278/s68w6rf5
Setname uu_aah_art
ID 38449
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s68w6rf5
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