https://www.popularmechanics.com/science/health/a64542602/olo-color-oz/?source=nl&utm_source=nl_pop&utm_medium=email&date=042325&utm_campaign=nl01_042325_HBU39536209&oo=&user_email=1e7f7a9239bb44f191dc979b8fe5e634e587dfe020b84a653d2040468a8b342b&GID=1e7f7a9239bb44f191dc979b8fe5e634e587dfe020b84a653d2040468a8b342b&utm_term=TEST-%20NEW%20TEST%20-%20Sending%20List%20-%20AM%20180D%20Clicks%2C%20NON%20AM%2090D%20Opens%2C%20Both%20Subbed%20Last%2030DScientists Discovered a New Color. It’s Been Right in Front of Us All AlongChip says "lol, we call that TEAL -- I can't believe the crap that passes for "Science" these days"Described as a kind of blue-green, the new color—named “olo”—can only be seen using lasers to manipulate certain photoreceptors.

cube-prism-colorful-light-refraction-royalty-free-image-1745352788.pjpeg.jpg (27.97 kB . 640x640 - viewed 66 times)MirageC//Getty Images
• The human eye perceives color using three types of cones, but no natural light can stimulate just the the cones associated with medium-wavelength light in the visible spectrum.
• A new tool, nicknamed Oz, can do just that by mapping the retina and specifically stimulating only these medium cones and no others.
• The result, according to the authors, is a new color (which they’ve named “olo”) that’s kind of like a deeply saturated blue-green, but unlike any color a human has ever glimpsed before.
The human eye is a wonder of evolution, and is our primary window into understanding the known universe that surrounds us. But even despite the hundreds of millions of years that fashioned our irises, formed our retinas, and molded our light-sensitive photoreceptors, our eyes can only see a fraction of the electromagnetic wonders that criss-cross the cosmos.
And even in this small visible sliver of the electromagnetic pie, some colors remain hidden from our view—until now. In a new paper published in the journal Science Advances, scientists from the University of California Berkeley and the University of Washington describe how they managed to only stimulate the cones in our eyes responsible for interpreting medium wavelength light using laser light. The result was a never-before-seen color ... blah, blah, blah --
I lost interest but take the link, if you are stupid ...
Related bullshit: "Purple Isn't Real" >
https://www.popularmechanics.com/science/a64393667/purple-is-fake/