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This was an image I took during the evening time on the led tv , I had two questions the first was why was the tv giving off a x pattern of the diffracted light which constitutes primary white light color? While as mirror doesn't do this. But I learnt about this "diffraction grating" in another stack question.

But my second question is , why is the mainly yellow light from the sun as due to Rayleigh scattering make the same x with the primary color distribution rather than having more red-orange colors. Some unwanted wavelength of light could have crept in but the majority is yellow right ? Am I missing something here ? enter image description here

top left light is from sun through the window the center light is from the phone's flash

Naveen V
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  • The "yellow" light of the sun contains all visible colors, as you have just found out like Newton did. – Jon Custer Feb 23 '23 at 20:24
  • but shouldn't the yellow light reaching to our eye(in evening due to rayleigh scattering) be of lower wavelengths and hence could only contain some partial wavelengths? – Naveen V Feb 24 '23 at 03:21
  • The color balance changes to some extent, yes, but there is still blue there. Just slightly less. Human perception of color is a complex subject, but it is not like a diffraction grating. – Jon Custer Feb 24 '23 at 13:08
  • so this light is not being diffraction grated ?? Also thanks for the yellow light answer https://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/381233/why-does-light-reflected-from-an-led-tv-screen-make-a-sharp-x-pattern here there was a talk about diffraction grating – Naveen V Feb 24 '23 at 13:26
  • Sure it is diffracted, so you see the blue content, while your eye after processing the signals from various cones has assigned ‘yellowish’ to the overall ‘color’, not ‘here is the full spectrum’ which your eyes can’t do anyway. – Jon Custer Feb 24 '23 at 13:29
  • ah makes sense thank you very much ! – Naveen V Feb 24 '23 at 13:31

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