selective yellow

{{Short description|Colour for automotive lamps}}

{{infobox colour

|title=Selective yellow (approximation)

|hex=FFBA00

|spelling=colour

|source=CIECD

|isccname=Strong orange yellow}}

File:Corning Conaphore y.jpg Conaphore made of selective yellow "Noviol" glass.]]

Selective yellow is a colour for automotive lamps, particularly headlamps and other road-illumination lamps, such as fog lamps.[http://www.unece.org/fileadmin/DAM/trans/doc/2005/wp29gre/TRANS-WP29-GRE-2005-04e.pdf UNECE] Under ECE regulations, headlamps were formerly permitted to be either white or selective yellow—in France, selective yellow was mandatory for all vehicles' road-illumination lamps until 1993.

Colour

Both the internationalized European ECE Regulation 19[http://www.unece.org/trans/main/wp29/wp29regs/r019r5e.pdf ECE Regulation 19: Uniform Provisions Concerning the Approval of Power-Driven Vehicle Front Fog Lamps] and North American SAE standard J583[http://standards.sae.org/j583_200509 SAE Standard J583: Front Fog Lamp] permit selective yellow front fog lamps. Meanwhile, ECE Regulation 48 (enforced 08 October 2016) requires new vehicles to be equipped with headlamps emitting white light.[https://op.europa.eu/en/publication-detail/-/publication/192086c4-870f-11e6-b076-01aa75ed71a1/language-en ECE Regulation 48: Uniform Provisions Concerning the Approval of Vehicles with Regard to the Installation of Lighting and Light-Signalling Devices] However, selective yellow headlamps remain permitted throughout Europe on vehicles already so equipped, as well as in non-European locales, such as Japan[http://retail.ihs.com/abstracts/jsa/jis-d-5500.jsp Japanese Industrial Standard JIS D-5500] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070815142229/http://retail.ihs.com/abstracts/jsa/jis-d-5500.jsp |date=2007-08-15 }} Automobile Parts--Lighting and Light Signaling Devices p. 5, sec. 4.4.2, table #4 and New Zealand.[https://web.archive.org/web/20140831152201/http://vehicleinspection.nzta.govt.nz/virms/in-service-wof-and-cof/general/lighting/headlamps New Zealand Vehicle Inspection Requirement Manual p. 4.1.2]

The intent of selective yellow is to improve vision by removing short, blue to violet wavelengths from the projected light. These wavelengths are difficult for the human visual system to process properly, and they cause perceived dazzle and glare effects in rain, fog and snow.{{cite journal|title=Driving in Snow: Effect of Headlamp Color at Mesopic and Photopic Light Levels|journal=SAE Technical Paper Series|date=2001|first=John|last=Bullough|author2=Mark S. Rea|volume=1|doi=10.4271/2001-01-0320|url=http://www.lightingresearch.org/programs/transportation/pdf/SAE/2001-01-0320.pdf|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060223111121/http://www.lightingresearch.org/programs/transportation/pdf/SAE/2001-01-0320.pdf|url-status=dead|archive-date=2006-02-23|access-date=2010-01-27}} Removing the blue-violet portion of a lamp's output to obtain selective yellow light can entail filter losses of around 15%,{{cite report

| author = Devaux, P.

| title = State-of-the-Art Signaling and Lighting

| chapter = State-of-the-Art-Signaling and Lighting

| series = SAE Technical Paper Series

| id=700386

| publisher = Society of Automotive Engineers

|year=1970

| volume = 1

| doi = 10.4271/700386

}} though the effect of this reduction is said to be mitigated or countervailed by the increased visual acuity available with yellow rather than white light in bad weather.

A research experiment done in the UK in 1968 using tungsten (non-halogen) lamps found that visual acuity is about 3% better with selective yellow headlamps than with white ones of equal intensity.{{cite report

| last1 = Christie

| first1 = A.W.

| last2 = Ashwood

| first2 = J.E.

| last3 = Symons

| first3 = R.D.H.

| year = 1968

| title = Visual Acuity in Yellow Headlights

| publisher = UK Ministry of Transport Road Research Laboratory

| id=LR 156

| url = https://trl.co.uk/sites/default/files/LR156.pdf

|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180729230449/https://trl.co.uk/sites/default/files/LR156.pdf

|archive-date=2018-07-29

| access-date = 29 July 2018

}} Research done in the Netherlands in 1976 concluded that yellow and white headlamps are equivalent as regards traffic safety, though yellow light causes less discomfort glare than white light.{{cite report

| year = 1976

| title = White or Yellow Light for Vehicle Head-Lamps?

| publisher = Dutch Institute for Road Safety Research

|id=1976-2E

| url = https://www.swov.nl/publicatie/white-or-yellow-light-vehicle-head-lamps

| access-date = 29 July 2018

}} Researchers note that tungsten filament lamps emit only a small amount of the blue light blocked by a selective-yellow filter, so such filtration makes only a small difference in the characteristics of the light output, and suggest that headlamps using newer kinds of sources such as metal halide (HID) bulbs may, through filtration, give off less visually distracting light while still having greater light output than halogen ones.

Formal definition

The UNECE Regulations formally define selective yellow in terms of the CIE 1931 colour space as follows:

cellspacing="5"

| Limit towards red

| y \ge 0.138 + 0.580 x

Limit towards green

| y \le 1.290 x - 0.100

Limit towards white

| y \ge 0.966 - x

Limit towards spectral value

| y \le 0.992 - x

For front fog lamps, the limit towards white is extended:

cellspacing="5"

| rowspan = "2" | Limit towards white

| y \ge 0.940 - x

y \ge 0.440

The entirety of the basic selective yellow definition lies outside the gamut of the sRGB colour space—such a pure yellow cannot be represented using RGB primaries. The colour swatch above is a desaturated approximation, created by taking the centroid of the standard selective yellow definition at (0.502, 0.477) and moving it towards the D65 white point, until it meets the sRGB gamut triangle at (0.478, 0.458).

File:Porsche_911_with_selective_yellow_headlights.jpg|Porsche 911 with selective yellow lights

File:foglights.jpg|Selective yellow foglights

File:fogson.jpg|The beam produced by selective yellow lights

References

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