Date post: | 19-Dec-2015 |
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Production and Transmission of Light
• Measurement
• Light and color production– Pigments, interference, scattering,
bioluminescence
• Transmission through the environment
• Optimal hue, contrast, shading
Color
Light intensity(analogous to sound amplitude)
• Radiant flux Photons/s• Irradiance Photons/s•m2
– Total light, including scattered and direct
• Radiant intensity Photons/s•sr• Radiance Photons/s•sr•m2
– Only direct light emitted from a specific area
– sr = steradian with 4 steradians in a sphere
– Note that intensity is independent of wavelength
– But wavelength is inversely related to energy
Light intensity variation
Color Spectra
Hue Chroma
Intensity
Color has 3 dimensions
Brightness = radiance
Sources of color
• Pigments– Molecules which selectively absorb photons of some
wavelengths and transmit others– Size of molecule affects wavelength absorption– Short chain molecules require high energy (short
wavelengths) for excitation
• Structural colors– Interference– Scattering
Pigments
Carotene absorbs blue andtransmits green, yellow and red
Benzene absorbs UV
Porphyrins: iron = hemoglobin,magnesium = chlorophyl
Carotenoids
Melanin
• Large protein that absorbs all wavelengths and, therefore, appears black
• Present in skin and hair of mammals, chitin of many insects
• Coat color variants are caused by temporal regulation of melanin production during hair follicle growth, e.g. agouti phenotype: dark-light-dark
Status badges in Harris sparrows
Chromatophores
Fish
Lizards
Cephalopods
Iridiophores containplatelets that reflectsome wavelengths
Chameleons can change color
Cuttlefish have chromatophores
Structural colors
Color depends on the reflection angle from feathers
Interference
Interference in feathers
Beetles coat melanin with wax
Color by Scattering
Color by scattering
Bioluminescence
Bioluminescence is common among marineorganisms, especially deep-sea fishes.
Habitat Transmission
• Amount and spectral composition of available light can differ by habitat
• Color brightness of an object depends on wavelengths of available light
• In terrestrial habitats, light spectra is influenced by– Sun’s angle, weather, vegetation
• Expect animals to utilize colors appropriate for habitats
Color filtering by habitat
Spectra in forest
Colors in whitelight
Colors in forest
Light reflectance
Light attenuation• Light attenuation follows inverse square law
which is independent of wavelength
• Scattering and absorption, however, increases as wavelength decreases
Signal detection
• Must discriminate object from background using brightness, color, pattern or movement
• Can adopt countershading or reverse counter shading for crypsis or conspicuousness
• Visual systems often exaggerate contrast to detect objects in background
Signalling may vary with habitat
Phylloscopus warblers
Counter and reverse shading
Pattern contrast
Photon noise
Eye resolution
Shape enhancement
Optimal signal and background hues
Mammalian Eye
Rods and Cones