Understanding the Phenomenon of Colors Combining to Create White Light

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Colors combine to create white light primarily through the perception of the human eye, which interprets equal stimulation of the three types of cones as white. White light is not a distinct wavelength in the electromagnetic spectrum but rather a perception resulting from various combinations of intensities and wavelengths. The concept of white light does not involve constructive interference of different wavelengths in a physical sense. Drawing a sinusoidal graph for white light is not feasible, as white is not a single wavelength but a combination of many. Overall, the phenomenon of white light is rooted in human perception rather than a specific physical property.
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Is it only in the eye that colors add up to be white?

I've been thinking a lot about how electromagnetic waves work.
The visible light is comprised of a electromagnetic radiation in the spectrum between 380 and 750 nm. Now, as far as I understand, if you "mix" all of these waves together, you get a color which the eye reads as white.

What I'm wondering about, is if this "appearing white" effect is something that only occurs in the eye, or if it is some physical quantity. (badly formulated).

Secondly, is white light actually all these different wavelengths "reacted" by constructively inteference?

Thirdly, if so, I'm wondering what it would look like if you were to draw a sinusoidal graph for "white light". Is this possible?

Thanks for any help!
 
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I am no expert on the matter, but as far as I know, white is only our eye's perception when all three different cones (in the eye) are stimulated in equal amounts. White is not present in the electromagnetic spectrum.
 
Color is a perception, not a physical phenomenon. Many different combinations of intensity and wavelength will be perceived as "white'.
 
Thanks! That was what I thought, but I was unsure. How about my second and third questions?
 
The answer to your first question tells you the answer to your second and third - they are based on a premise that is not how nature is.
 
So I know that electrons are fundamental, there's no 'material' that makes them up, it's like talking about a colour itself rather than a car or a flower. Now protons and neutrons and quarks and whatever other stuff is there fundamentally, I want someone to kind of teach me these, I have a lot of questions that books might not give the answer in the way I understand. Thanks
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