Why do neon signs glow in colors?
Show answer & explanation
Answer: Gas atoms emit specific wavelengths
Heat produces colored light — Wrong. Heat is involved (plasma), but color comes from electrons dropping energy levels in gas atoms, emitting specific wavelengths.
Electricity splits into colors — Wrong. Electricity doesn't split into colors. Electric current excites gas atoms; when electrons return to lower energy levels, they emit specific light wavelengths.
Gas atoms emit specific wavelengths ✓ — Correct! Neon signs contain low-pressure gases (neon, argon, xenon, etc.). Electricity excites gas atoms—electrons jump to higher energy levels. When they drop back, they emit photons of specific wavelengths. Neon emits red-orange (~640nm), helium gives yellow, argon+mercury makes blue. Each element has a unique emission spectrum!
More Light & Vision questions
- Indigo jeans look blue. Which light is the dye mostly taking away?
- Why are blue-green or white night lights often worse for insects than redder light?
- Moths circling a lamp are not simply aiming at it. What flight reflex gets hijacked?
- Why does glass break light into colors?
- Why do we see darkness when eyes are closed?
- Why do sunsets appear red and orange?
