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Colours under fluorescent lights.

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Bert | 21:58 Mon 13th Nov 2006 | Science
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Have you noticed that, if you flick the pages of a thick book with white pages in the light of a fluorescent tube, you can see alternating bands of colour? I see blue and orange, but I don't know if anybody else does. The explanation must have something to do with the 50 Hz flicker of the mains current, but can anybody take it any further than that?
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Thanks, mibn, but I did not see any colours when I tried the link. Possibly the illusion is not so strong when viewed on a monitor, though many of the respondents said they saw colours, and they seemed to mostly report bluish and yellowish colours. So it may be that.
I tried it again today and saw a deep red in the gaps of the inner half of the circle. When I reversed rotation the deep red colour changed to the gaps in the outer half of the circle, same as last time I tried.

I've seen patterns of colours in the flashing of a strobe light in a dark room but I have not tried that lately.

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Colours under fluorescent lights.

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