The science of yellow light sodium lights on the road


Large city streets require more bright lights to illuminate at night. Sodium lights are often used for this purpose. The science behind the choice of yellow light instead of the attractive white light of mercury, tubelite and halogen is contained.

When white light passes through some medium, it appears in seven colors and a colorful hollow. This process is more pronounced when the atmosphere is raining and traffic is hampered. The yellow light of sodium light spreads evenly and does not shrink. The capacity of sodium light is even higher. One watt's sodium light gives more light than a one-watt tube. This is also true of cars and other vehicle headlights with a yellow light on.

Comments