Information about Black
This article is about the color. For other uses, see Black (disambiguation).
| Black | ||
|---|---|---|
| <imagemap>Image:Information-silk.png|About these coordinates rect 0 0 50 50 About these coordinates desc none</imagemap>— Color coordinates — | ||
| Hex triplet | #000000 | |
| RGBB | (r, g, b) | (0, 0, 0) |
| HSV | (h, s, v) | (-°, -%, 0%) |
| Source | By definition | |
| B: Normalized to [0–255] (byte) | ||
Scientifically, a black object absorbs all the colors of the visible spectrum and reflects none of them. This is sometimes confused with black being called 'a mixture of all colors', but that is not the case. In fact, an object emitting or reflecting all colors is perceived as white. Sometimes black is described as an "achromatic color"; in practice, black can be considered a color, e.g., the black cat or black paint.
Color or light in science
Black can be defined as the visual impression experienced in directions from which no visible light reaches the eye. (This makes a contrast with whiteness, the impression of any combination of colors of light that equally stimulates all three types of color-sensitive visual receptors.)Pigments that absorb light rather than reflect it back to the eye "look black". A black pigment can, however, result from a combination of several pigments that collectively absorb all colors. If appropriate proportions of three primary pigments are mixed, the result reflects so little light as to be called "black".
This provides two superficially opposite but actually complementary descriptions of black. Black is the lack of all colors of light, or an exhaustive combination of multiple colors of pigment. See also Primary colors
| c | m | y | k | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0% | 0% | 0% | 100% | (canonical) |
| 100% | 100% | 100% | 0% | (ideal inks, theoretical only) |
| 100% | 100% | 100% | 100% | (registration black) |
In physics, a black body is a perfect absorber of light, but by a rule derived by Einstein it is also, when heated, the best emitter. Thus, the best radiative cooling, out of sunlight, is by using black paint, though it is important that it be black (a nearly perfect absorber) in the infrared as well.
In elementary science, far Ultraviolet light is called "black light" because, unseen (per se), it causes many minerals and other substances to fluoresce.
Absorption of light
In keeping with the law of conservation of energy, as a black color surface absorbs the light particles that hit it, the surface's particles are getting excited (excited particles = higher temperature).Usage, symbolism, colloquial expressions
Neutral symbolism
- The term "black" is often used in the West to denote race for persons whose skin color ranges from light to darker shades of brown. For a discussion of usage, see the main entry at Black (people) and "Color" terminology for race.
- In arguments, things can be black-and-white, meaning that the issue at hand is dichotomized. However, this dualism is fraught with danger, as one may assign the colors "black and white" to bad and good, respectively. Also, few arguments have only two opposing sides.
- Black frequently symbolizes ambiguity, secrecy, and the unknown.
- A black box is any device whose internal workings are unknown or inexplicable. In theater, the black box is a room backstage in which the performers can practice.
- A black project is a secretive project, like Enigma Decryption, other classified military programs or operations, Narcotics, or police sting operations.
- The blackshirts were Italian Fascist militias (negative for anti-fascists, but presumably positive for the original fascists themselves)
- Some organizations are called "black" when they keep a low profile, like Sociétés Anonymes and secret societies.
- The term "black hole" is applied to collapsed stars. This term is metaphorical in the extreme, because few properties of black objects or black voids apply to black holes. However, light emitted within a black hole's event horizon cannot escape, hence a black hole cannot be directly observed.
- The national rugby team of New Zealand is called the All Blacks, in reference to their black outfits, and the color is also shared by other New Zealand national teams such as the Black Caps (cricket) and the Kiwis (rugby league).
- Black Hole Sun is an award-winning (1995 Grammy Award for Best Hard Rock Performance) song by the Seattle band Soundgarden from their albums Superunknown (1994) and A-Sides(1997).
- Association football (soccer) referees traditionally wear all-black uniforms, however nowadays other uniform colors may also be worn.
- In auto racing, a black flag signals a certain driver to go into the pits.
- Black is used for anarchist symbolism, sometimes split in diagonal with other colors for further symbolism. The plain black flag is explained in various ways, sometimes as an anti-flag or a non-flag. Wearing black clothing is also sometimes an anarchist tactic during demonstrations, with a practical benefit of not attracting attention and making later identification of a subject difficult. This strategy referred to as a black bloc.
- Black metal is a style of music including bands such as Darkthrone and Mayhem (naturally, fans or artists relating to the genre embrace the term whereas detractors use it negatively).
- In Portuguese politics, black is the party color of the Left Bloc.
- In ancient China, black was the symbol of North and Water, one of the main five colors. There is no negative or positive meaning associated with it.
- A polished black mirror is used for scrying, and is thought to help see into the paranormal world without interference or distraction.
- Members of the modern Goth subculture dress predominantly in black.
- Many performers of classical or other "serious" art music dress in all-black clothes for a concert or recital.
- A large number of teams have uniforms designed with black colors - many feeling the color sometimes imparts a psychological advantage in its wearers. Among the more famous (or infamous) include Oakland Raiders and Pittsburgh Steelers of the NFL, the San Antonio Spurs and Miami Heat of the NBA, and Inter Milan of the Serie A of the Italian soccer leagues.
- Black sky refers to the appearance of space as one emerges from the Earth's atmosphere.
- The folk song "Black Is the Color (of My True Love's Hair)" makes a neutral association with the color.
Positive symbolism
- In the Maasai tribes of Kenya and Tanzania, the color black is associated with rain clouds, becoming a symbol of life and prosperity.
- Black was also the color of the Arab dynasty of Abbasid caliphs, and that's why black is frequently used in flags of Arab-Muslim countries
- In Western fashion, black is considered stylish, sexy, and powerful. This seems to be for reasons of contrast with the light skin (conversely, white t-shirts or suits are sometimes stylish among dark-skinned people.)
- The colloquialism "the new black" is a reference to the latest trend or fad, on the basis that black is always fashionable.
- Black can also be seen as the color of prestige: for example, limousines are usually in black, and black tuxedos are worn at black tie functions.
- The band AC/DC sang "Back in Black", a song about being successful and ambitious once again.
- Black is seen as a color of seriousness and authority.
- Many priests of the older religious denominations traditionally wear black.
- Lawyers and judges often wear black robes, as do university graduates (see Academic dress).
- The beltzak ("blacks" after their uniform) are the riot control units of the Basque Autonomous Police
- Traditionally, Police vehicles ("Panda cars") were in black and white.
- In the long-running Japanese tokusatsu TV series Super Sentai (and its American counterpart, Power Rangers), black is one of the colors worn by a Super Sentai or Power Ranger member. In both series, along with the green rangers, the are often seen as the "macho" rangers and are typically male. They are interchangeable with green, and in Super Sentai, black is usually second-in-command.
- Black Watch is the senior Highland Regiment of the British Army.
- To say one's accounts are "in the black" is used to mean that one is free of debt.
- (Being "in the red" is to be in debt—in traditional bookkeeping, negative amounts, such as costs, were printed in red ink, and positive amounts, like revenues, were printed in black ink, so that if "the bottom line" is printed in black, the firm is profiting.)
- Cathar Perfects wore black (Cathars viewed black as a color of perfection).
- In Rastafari culture, amongst others, black is seen as beautiful.
- In Japanese culture, kuro (black) is a symbol of nobility, age, and experience, where it contrasts with shiro (white), which symbolizes serfdom, youth, and naiveté. This has resulted in many martial arts as the black belt being one of the first senior ranks called dan.
- In Hinduism the Hindu deity Krishna means the black one.
- Black Friday is the first Friday after Thanksgiving and is, statistically, the largest shopping day in the US. It is given this title because, in accounting, profits are marked in black ink while losses are marked with red ink. The concept is that, all the shopping can put a company into the black (i.e., make a profit) for the year.
Negative symbolism
Colloquially, black is sometimes used with a negative connotation. The reasons for this are various, but the most widely accepted explanations are that night is experienced by humans as negative and dangerous. A secondary reason is that stains are most visible as dark additions to pale materials. In traditional class-based Western cultures "pale" skin indicated genteel domestic or intellectual indoor-work as opposed to rough outdoor labor in the fields. Aspects of this black/white opposition are not unique to the West, as, for example in the Indian varna system and in Japanese Geisha makeup. African, Afro-Caribbean and African-American writers such as Frantz Fanon, Langston Hughes, Maya Angelou, and Ralph Ellison in particular identify a number of negative symbolisms surrounding the word "black", arguing that the good vs. bad dualism associated with white and black provide prejudiced connotations to "Color" terminology for race.- A "black day" (or week or month), in these cultures, would refer to a sad or tragic time. The Romans already marked fasti days with white stones and nefasti days with black.
- E.g., Black Tuesday, stock market crash on October 29, 1929 which is the start of the Great Depression.
- Black Thursday, stock market downturn on October 24, 1929
- Black Monday, stock market crash on October 19, 1987.
- the Black September in Jordan refers to a month in which thousands were killed.
- Black July killing of the Tamil population by the Sinhalese government
- Black Spring (Printemps noir) refers to the events of spring 2001 in the Berber region of Kabylia (Algeria), when the police shot and killed more than 100 people.
- Black Wednesday caused Britain to pull out of the European Exchange Rate Mechanism.
- Black Friday, various tragic events. (Exception: See Black Friday (shopping).)
- Many poems and songs use the word black negatively (e.g. "Paint It Black" (Rolling Stones), "Baby's In Black" (Beatles), "Black Eyed Dog" (Nick Drake), " Fade to Black" (Metallica, Dire Straits, Zeromancer).
- In English heraldry, black means darkness, doubt, ignorance, and uncertainty. (The American Girls Handy Book, p. 370)
- Black is often a color of mourning in Western societies. Historically, widows and widowers were often expected to wear black. Across much of Africa, white is a color of mourning and is worn during funerals.
- Black comedy is a form of comedy dealing with morbid and serious topics.
- Black magic is an evil form of magic, often connected with death.
- A blacklist is a list of undesirable persons or entities (to be placed on the list is said to be "blacklisted".
- Blackball: to blackball someone is to block their entry into a some club or some such institution. It comes from an old English practice in which current members of a club or the like would vote on the admission of a candidate by each secretly placing a white or black ball in a hat. If upon the completion of voting, there was even one black ball amongst the white, the candidate would be denied membership, and he would never know who had "blackballed" him.
- Evil witches are stereotypically dressed in black and good fairies in white. Melodrama villains are dressed in black and heroines in white dresses. In many Hollywood Westerns, bad cowboys wear black hats while the good ones wear white. Funeral dress is black, wedding gowns are white.
- In computer security, a blackhat is an attacker with evil intentions, while a whitehat bears no such ill will. (This is derived from the Western convention.)
- The black market is used to denote the trade of illegal goods, or alternatively the illegal trade of otherwise legal items at considerably higher prices.
- Blackmail is the act of threatening to reveal information about a person unless the threatened party fulfills certain demands. This information is usually of an embarrassing or socially damaging nature. Ordinarily, such a threat is illegal.
- The black sheep of the family is the ne'er-do-well.
- The infamous "black hole of Calcutta."
- A black mood is a bad one (e.g. Winston Churchill's depression, which he called "my black dog").[1]
- A black cat is superstitiously considered bad luck and linked with death in the U.S., however in the UK a black cat is considered good luck.
- If you sink the black eight-ball in billiards before all others are out of play, you lose (The ball with which you sink all others is the white cue ball).
- A black mark against you is a bad thing.
- A black-hearted person is mean and unloving.
- Black propaganda is the use of known falsehoods, partial truths, or masquerades in propaganda to confuse an opponent.
- Black Death, also known as the Black Plague, was a pandemic in Europe which killed tens of millions of people.
Black pigments
References
See also
| Web colors | black | gray | silver | white | red | maroon | purple | fuchsia | green | lime | olive | yellow | orange | blue | navy | teal | aqua |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gray | Arsenic | Bistre | Black | Charcoal | Davy's gray | Eigengrau | Feldgrau | Liver | Payne's gray | Sable | Seal brown |
| no swatch | no swatch | ||||||||||
| Silver | Slate gray | Super black | Taupe | Purple Taupe | Medium Taupe | Taupe gray | Pale Taupe | White | |||
| no swatch | |||||||||||
External links
Black is both a color and scientifically speaking the absence of color.
Black may also refer to:
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Black may also refer to:
- Black people (classification)
- Black (surname), people named Black (disambiguation)
- Black (horse), referring to a coat color
- Black
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RGB color model is an additive model in which red, green, and blue (often used in additive light models) are combined in various ways to reproduce other colors. The name of the model and the abbreviation ‘RGB’ come from the three primary colors, red, green, and blue and
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Red is any of a number of similar colors evoked by light consisting predominantly of the longest wavelengths of light discernible by the human eye, in the wavelength range of roughly 625–750 nm.
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Green is a color, the perception of which is evoked by light having a spectrum dominated by energy with a wavelength of roughly 520–570 nm. It is considered one of the additive primary colors.
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The term blue may refer to any of a number of similar colours. The sensation of blue is made by light having a spectrum dominated by energy in the wavelength range of about 440–490 nm.
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HSL and HSV (also called HSB) are two related representations of points in an RGB color space, which attempt to describe perceptual color relationships more accurately than RGB, while remaining computationally simple.
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Hue is one of the three main attributes of perceived color, in addition to lightness and chroma (or colorfulness). Hue is also one of the three dimensions in some colorspaces along with saturation, and brightness (also known as lightness or value).
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colorfulness, chroma, and saturation are related concepts referring to the intensity of a specific color. More technically, colorfulness is the perceived difference between the color of some stimulus and gray, chroma
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Brightness is an attribute of visual perception in which a source appears to emit a given amount of light. In other words, brightness is the perception elicited by the luminance of a visual target. This is a subjective attribute/property of an object being observed.
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Color or colour[1] (see spelling differences) is the visual perceptual property corresponding in humans to the categories called red, yellow, blue, black, etc.
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White is the combination of all the colors of the visible light spectrum.[1]. It is sometimes described as an achromatic color, like black.
White is technically achromatic, and not a color, since it has no hue.
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White is technically achromatic, and not a color, since it has no hue.
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visible spectrum (or sometimes optical spectrum) is the portion of the electromagnetic spectrum that is visible to (can be detected by) the human eye. Electromagnetic radiation in this range of wavelengths is called visible light or simply light.
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White is the combination of all the colors of the visible light spectrum.[1]. It is sometimes described as an achromatic color, like black.
White is technically achromatic, and not a color, since it has no hue.
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White is technically achromatic, and not a color, since it has no hue.
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Color or colour[1] (see spelling differences) is the visual perceptual property corresponding in humans to the categories called red, yellow, blue, black, etc.
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Light is electromagnetic radiation of a wavelength that is visible to the eye (visible light). In a scientific context, the word "light" is sometimes used to refer to the entire electromagnetic spectrum.
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Primary Colors: A Novel of Politics
Author Joe Klein
Country United States
Language English
Genre(s) Political novel
Publisher Random House
Publication date January 16, 1996
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Author Joe Klein
Country United States
Language English
Genre(s) Political novel
Publisher Random House
Publication date January 16, 1996
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CMYK (short for cyan, magenta, yellow, and key (black), and often referred to as process color or four color) is a subtractive color model, used in color printing, also used to describe the printing process itself.
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registration black refers to 100% coverage in each of the four process colors: cyan (C), magenta (M), yellow (Y), and black (K). More generally, if a different mixture of colors is being used, registration black marks in each of the colorants (inks) used.
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Physics is the science of matter[1] and its motion[2][3], as well as space and time[4][5] —the science that deals with concepts such as force, energy, mass, and charge.
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black body is an object that absorbs all electromagnetic radiation that falls onto it. No radiation passes through it and none is reflected. It is this lack of both transmission and reflection to which the name refers.
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Infrared (IR) radiation is electromagnetic radiation of a wavelength longer than that of visible light, but shorter than that of radio waves. The name means "below red" (from the Latin infra, "below"), red being the color of visible light with the longest wavelength.
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Phosphorescence is a specific type of photoluminescence related to fluorescence. Unlike fluorescence, a phosphorescent material does not immediately re-emit the radiation it absorbs.
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conservation of energy states that the total amount of energy in any closed system remains constant but can be recreated, although it may change forms, e.g. friction turns kinetic energy into thermal energy.
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Light is electromagnetic radiation of a wavelength that is visible to the eye (visible light). In a scientific context, the word "light" is sometimes used to refer to the entire electromagnetic spectrum.
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trillion fold).]]
Temperature is a physical property of a system that underlies the common notions of hot and cold; something that is hotter generally has the greater temperature. Temperature is one of the principal parameters of thermodynamics.
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Temperature is a physical property of a system that underlies the common notions of hot and cold; something that is hotter generally has the greater temperature. Temperature is one of the principal parameters of thermodynamics.
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Western world, the West or the Occident (Latin occidens -sunset, -west, as distinct from the Orient) [1] can have multiple meanings dependent on its context (e.g., the time period, or the social situation).
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RACE can refer to:
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- Research and Development in Advanced Communications Technologies in Europe, a program launched in 1988 by the Commission of the European Communities
- Rapid Amplification of cDNA Ends, a molecular biology technique
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Human skin color can range from very dark brown to nearly colorless (appearing pinkish white due to the blood in the skin) in different people. Skin color is determined by the amount and type of the pigment melanin in the skin. On average, women have slightly lighter skin than men.
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Brown, when used as a general term, is a color which is a dark yellow, orange, or red, of low luminance relative to lighter or white colored objects.[1]
Some pale orange and yellow colors of lower saturation are called light browns.
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Some pale orange and yellow colors of lower saturation are called light browns.
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