Our idea of “warm” colors is just a historical accident. Wood burns orange because it produces soot, which glows orange in the flame. Same applies to candles too, because there’s never enough oxygen to burn all the carbon.
If we’d started with purified hydrocarbons instead, blue might have been the ultimate “warm” color. Natural gas burns with a blue or even invisible flame, a sign of complete combustion. Orange, then, would be the color of flawed, struggling fire.
Imagine a house heated and lit by a gas furnace instead of a traditional fireplace. The light from the fire would be blue, and we’d associate that glow with warmth and coziness. Picture old paintings with a cozy atmosphere, their hearths glowing blue. If everyone grew up like that, blue would be the warmest color instead of orange.

“Different flame types of a Bunsen burner depend on oxygen supply. On the left a rich fuel with no premixed oxygen produces a yellow sooty diffusion flame; on the right a lean fully oxygen premixed flame produces no soot and the flame color is produced by molecular radicals, especially CH and C2 band emission.”
Source: Wikipedia
Not quite. “Warmer” colors actually heat things up more. There’s a reason why heat lamps produce red or infrared light.
Hmm… I didn’t think about black body radiation that much. The filaments in a toaster really are red/orange/yellow when hot. I wonder what it would take to to squeeze blue out of black body radiation. Theoretically, it should be possible. Probably thousands of degrees… I think we’re moving into plasma physics territory at this point. Regular filaments just wouldn’t be able to handle blue light production. Electric arcs are blue though, and that plasma is pretty hot. Such an edge case, but still…
I think you’re missing the point a bit. I’m talking about how much heat different wavelengths of light transfer.
There’s an interesting experiment you can do if you have the right equipment: take the classic experiment where you produce a rainbow with a prism. Then, take a sensitive thermometer and go along the spectrum. The red end of the spectrum will be the warmest (unless you go even further, the area beyond that will be even warmer from the infrared), the blue end the coldest (although still warmer than the surroundings).
Oh ok. So when the peak of the emission spectrum is in the IR range, the visible color will definitely be closer to red or orange. The amount of blue light emitted in that case will be very low. That’s what the thermometer experiment can definitely demonstrate clearly.
However, if the black body is hot enough that the peak is in the blue wavelength band, then the total IR output should also be pretty high, just like everything else is at that point. I wonder if it’s even higher than in the first example. Would need to calculate that properly… Anyway there will also be a fair bit of UV, so don’t try this at home. Maybe even some x-rays if the arc is hot enough.
As far as traditional carbon-arc lamps are concerned, people at the time wrote that the light was white. Maybe the arc was not hot enough or be perceived as blue. Also, the human eye is not particularly sensitive at those wavelengths, so that could explain some of it too.
If you are familiar with queer cinema, it is.
LOL. With a poster like that, I expect blue to be a pretty hot color.
Except that humanity absolutely did not possess the necessary technology to have it this way.
Humanity may not have, but there are (admittedly very few) natural blue flames:
Hmm… There’s nothing quite like the smell of sulfur dioxide in the morning.
Fair enough.
I always thought that Martians would have their traffic lights the other way around. Green is calm since it’s associated with plants, and Mars is obviously covered in red foliage - just look at it! Meanwhile red is a warning since it is the colour of blood and we’re programmed to pay attention when we see blood for obvious reasons. But everyone knows Martians (like most aliens) bleed green. So their traffic lights must have opposite colours from ours.
Yeah, these cultural associations can get pretty wild. So, would you wear black or white at a funeral? Depends on the cultural context.
That’s why I wore a zebra-striped shirt to the last one I went to
As a bonus, you won’t ever get invited to any boring events again. It’s a win-win for everyone!
Haha 😂
deleted by creator
Europe - final countdown
Oh-oh, we’re heading for Venus (Venus)
And still, we stand tall
'Cause maybe they’ve seen us
And welcome us all, yeah
With so many light years to goWait, what? You’re heading for Venus, and you have many light years to go? This song was clearly written by aliens. I rest my case.
We have two “blue hours” and two “golden hours” a day, and they have associated temperature differences.



