Does the color purple really exist?

The color purple is, in a way, invented by our brains.

an abstract illustration of overlapping, glowing purple circles
Purple is made up of short wavelengths (blue) and long wavelengths (red).
(Image credit: Westend61 via Getty Images)

The world is awash with the color purple — lavender flowers, amethyst gemstones, plums, eggplants and purple emperor butterflies. But if you look closely at the visible-light portion of the electromagnetic spectrum, you'll notice that purple (which is different from bluish hues of violet and indigo) is absent.

That's because purple may be made up by our brains; It exists only because of how the brain processes color.

Alice Sun
Live Science Contributor

Alice Sun is a science journalist based in Brooklyn. She covers a wide range of topics, including ecology, neuroscience, social science and technology. Her work has appeared in Audubon, Sierra, Inverse and more. For her bachelor's degree, she studied environmental biology at McGill University in Canada. She also has a master's degree in science, health and environmental reporting from NYU.

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