Are you sure? My understanding is that color (in science) is an indication of the range or combination of wavelengths of photons (as far as light emitted).
But a wavelength is not itself an actual colour. The wavelength is proposed as something that triggers the production of (in us at least) -or corresponds to- a certain colour.
When I speak of colours I mean their phenomenal reality. The problem with the present approach to colour is that it is presumed -contrary to reason and all evidence- to not really “be there” and, therefore, we have to find out where it really is and comes from*. So scientists go hunting for a source - a kind of colour manufacturing machine - and constantly find themselves baffled because everything they are trained to look at is necessarily something physical, but by that fact necessarily devoid of any colour. So now its colour needs a source, and round and round we not-so-merrily go in our colour hunting crusade, which is really just a colour concealing trap that couldn’t possibly succeed in “finding” colour. Now just think about that. How hard do you have to look, normally, to find colour in the world? In the modern account, you literally need a microscope coupled with cellular biology.
*And this is what I mean by sins against nature and nature not forgiving us it. That colour is real and exists is self-evident. Failing to acknowledge this reality is a kind of crime against our own nature (reason).
The closest to an actual appearance of phenomenal colour entering into our world in a scientific account I have seen is in the cells directly behind our eyes that produces colour via special “pigments” depending on the quantity of protons entering into the cell. However, this explanation just begs the question and these rather mysterious “pigments” are just, near as I can tell, red herrings. Even granting FTSOA that we finally have something that itself possesses colour(s) and can account for its phenomenal presence or appearance in the world, we are still left wondering why everything else couldn’t just likewise also have colour actually present in it.
Now these pigments, coupled with a “complex visual system” that is “associated with the brain” do a lot of heavy lifting in explaining colour; however, and rather interestingly, this is also where the explanatory power of the system collapses. The “pigments” aren’t defined and -notwithstanding their enormous privilege of being the manufacturers of all colour- don’t enjoy, e.g., their own article in wiki; whereas, one would expect these pigments to be of the keenest interest. They are simply described as a chemical molecule, unique amongst the rest as they somehow managed to be or have colour actually present in them (or perhaps only when connected to a brain).
To get an idea of how much work “pigments” are supposed to do, see the following articles:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photoreceptor_cell
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_vision
Here are some gems:
Nothing categorically distinguishes the visible spectrum of electromagnetic radiation from invisible portions of the broader spectrum. In this sense,
color is not a property of electromagnetic radiation, but
a feature of visual perception by an observer. Furthermore,
there is an arbitrary mapping between wavelengths of light in the visual spectrum and human experiences of color.
Color derives from the spectrum of light (distribution of light power versus wavelength) interacting in the eye with the spectral sensitivities of the light receptors.
Photoreceptors do not signal color; they
only signal the presence of light in the visual field.
Therefore, the response of a single photoreceptor is ambiguous when it comes to color.
Humans and other mammals[which?] have evolved trichromacy based
partly on pigments inherited from early vertebrates.
Because perception of color stems from the varying spectral sensitivity of different types of cone cells in the retina to different parts of the spectrum, colors may be defined and quantified by the degree to which they stimulate these cells. These
physical or physiological quantifications of color, however, do not fully explain the psychophysical perception of color appearance.
…indeed, a human’s perception of colors is a subjective process whereby the brain responds to the stimuli that are produced when incoming light reacts with the several types of cone photoreceptors in the eye.
You can read all the interconnected articles with the various authors’ Herculean attempts to somehow finally sneak colour into the world while contradicting themselves and each other with record breaking frequency.