Color matching

Applet: Nora Willett

Text: Marc Levoy

Technical assistance: Andrew Adams


In our introduction to color theory, we showed that for a given choice of three primary colors, one can record the amount of each primary required to visually match each color in the rainbow. We also said that this record can be plotted as three curves, which are called the "trichromatic matching functions". This matching experiment was first undertaken in the 1850's by James Clerk Maxwell (of Maxwell's equations fame). His experiment consisted of trying to match a patch of white light using an additive superposition of three single-wavelength primaries. The color of one primary was made to vary through the rainbow over a sequence of trials. The color of the other two were fixed, but the user was free to adjust their intensities on each trial to achieve a match against the white patch. In this applet we explore a common variant on this experiment, in which we try to match a patch of color whose wavelength varies through the rainbow. At our disposal are three primary colors whose wavelengths are fixed, but whose intensities we may adjust on each trial to match the changing patch.