Have humans seen all colors?

Fluorescence usually produces light composed of a single wavelength, or of a small handful of wavelengths. Light from an incandescent source or light reflected off an object is usually composed of a wide range of different wavelengths. That’s what gives fluorescent objects their unnaturally vivid colors.

I mentioned it two posts earlier.

If you aim any infrared remote control at a digital camera lens (even a phone camera will work for this) the camera sensor represents the infrared LED output on the camera display screen as a bright white flickering light. Is this approximate to how animals might see infrared?

Even a normal CCD camera without an IR-blocking filter will pick up an IR LED as bright. In fact, it will pick up a normal incandescent indicator light as MUCH brighter than it appears to the eye, because most of the bulb’s output is in the IR.

If there were animals who saw in the IR, that is indeed how they’d see the world. But the only animals I know that “see” in the IR are things like Pit Vipers. They have essentially pinhole camera eyes, with really big pinholes. They sense a pretty big blue, rather than a well-defined image. The snakes use their pit “vision” as a rough heat-seeker, and confirm direction with normal vision. (Although I’ve seen photos of blindfolded vipers accurately strikinhg at a balloon filled with hot water).

Sorry, didn’t see it. Ha! “See it!” Get it? …taps mike… “These are the jokes folks, you can laugh or sit there and do nothing, it’s up to you.”

Well. that guy who built goggles that explout humans’ residual IR vision reports that it just looks red. I suspect that’s because we don’t have another set of infrared-sensitive receptor cells.

That’s ‘blur’, right?

Now there’s an interesting job: snake blindfolder.

“How was work today, dear?”

“Lousy. I had to do fifteen pit vipers and an anaconda, and one of the pit vipers wasn’t fully tranked. Good thing I was wearing my protective gauntlets, or he would have broken the skin. I think I’ll apply for that venom-collecting job. At lest there everyone knows what to expect…”

Sounds like a hero from a pulp novel.

"Snake Blindfolder, vs. the Platinum Horde of Alaskania!"