Science Hue new? Scientists claim to have found colour no one has seen before - Contested discovery achieved by experiment firing laser pulses into eyes, stimulating retina cells


Ian Sample
Fri 18 Apr 2025

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The researchers, including the vision scientist Austin Roorda (pictured), said the colour, olo, could only be experienced through laser manipulation of the retina.

After walking the Earth for a few hundred thousand years, humans might think they have seen it all. But not according to a team of scientists who claim to have experienced a colour no one has seen before.

The bold – and contested – assertion follows an experiment in which researchers in the US had laser pulses fired into their eyes. By stimulating individual cells in the retina, the laser pushed their perception beyond its natural limits, they say.

Their description of the colour is not too arresting – the five people who have seen it call it blue-green – but that, they say, does not fully capture the richness of the experience.

“We predicted from the beginning that it would look like an unprecedented colour signal but we didn’t know what the brain would do with it,” said Ren Ng, an electrical engineer at the University of California, Berkeley. “It was jaw-dropping. It’s incredibly saturated.”

The researchers shared an image of a turquoise square to give a sense of the colour, which they named olo, but stressed that the hue could only be experienced through laser manipulation of the retina.

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The researchers claimed this square was the closest colour match they had to olo.

“There is no way to convey that colour in an article or on a monitor,” said Austin Roorda, a vision scientist on the team. “The whole point is that this is not the colour we see, it’s just not. The colour we see is a version of it, but it absolutely pales by comparison with the experience of olo.”

Humans perceive the colours of the world when light falls on colour-sensitive cells called cones in the retina. There are three types of cones that are sensitive to long (L), medium (M) and short (S) wavelengths of light.

Natural light is a blend of multiple wavelengths that stimulate L, M and S cones to different extents. The variations are perceived as different colours. Red light primarily stimulates L cones, while blue light chiefly activates S cones. But M cones sit in the middle and there is no natural light that excites these alone.

The Berkeley team set out to overcome the limitation. They began by mapping a small part of a person’s retina to pinpoint the positions of their M cones. A laser is then used to scan the retina. When it comes to an M cone, after adjusting for movement of the eye, it fires a tiny pulse of light to stimulate the cell, before moving on to the next cone.

The result, published in Science Advances, is a patch of colour in the field of vision about twice the size of a full moon. The colour is beyond the natural range of the naked eye because the M cones are stimulated almost exclusively, a state natural light cannot achieve. The name olo comes from the binary 010, indicating that of the L, M and S cones, only the M cones are switched on.

The claim left one expert bemused. “It is not a new colour,” said John Barbur, a vision scientist at City St George’s, University of London. “It’s a more saturated green that can only be produced in a subject with normal red-green chromatic mechanism when the only input comes from M cones.” The work, he said, had “limited value”.

The researchers believe the tool, named Oz vision after the Emerald City in the L Frank Baum books, will help them probe basic science questions about how the brain creates visual perceptions of the world. But it may have other applications. Through bespoke stimulation of cells in the retina, researchers might learn more about colour blindness or diseases that affect vision such as retinitis pigmentosa.

Will the rest of the world get the chance to experience olo for themselves? “This is basic science,” said Ng. “We’re not going to see olo on any smartphone displays or any TVs any time soon. And this is very, very far beyond VR headset technology.”
 
Huh. I didn't expect it to be so close to a color I have seen before that looked unlike anything I ever saw. That color (but way more powerful and glowing and depthful) looks so close to the center of the Cherenkov radiation glow, the color of observing a nuclear fission reactor actively at work. I have been lucky enough to see it twice and the pictures you can find of the blue glow don't show how the blue at the center of it all becomes almost blue-green through the intensity of the emission.

It was the most beautiful and indescribable color I ever saw and nothing is that color. But this? This sounds like it might be kind of close.
 
Medical Sperg: One of my friends always had weird color vision, and then the optometrist at the local Wally World explained that usually the different color detecting cones are usually dispersed at random in equal numbers in the retina, but sometimes there’s an imbalance in the proportions so that changes the color perception. In his case one eye had an excess of blue cone, and the other had an excess of yellow cones.
It’s interesting to hear that scientists can now offer some physical evidence that we all do in fact see the same colours. It reminds me of a funny day in high school. My friends were discussing this very question and it amusingly devolved into people checking the colours of everyday objects “is the sky blue?” “yeah bro is grass green to you?” I hung out with a lot of stoners.
 
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So, Qing-dynasty celadon porcelain?
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I thought my Stratocaster was magical until I read this article. Now I can see its seafoam green-ness and it's not just a guitar neck and pick guard floating in the air.

Now it's just like any other guitar and I'm sad. I thought I had an invisible guitar but then some idiots in California had to invent a new color and it's just there, and it's too late to return it and get my money back.
 
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This may be one of the few times where kiwifarmers respond like niggercattle, because seeing a new color is genuinely an exciting prospect, much like the discovery of umami as a flavor.

It may not be as useful as say, the discovery of how to produce efficient blue leds, which was incredibly hard and sought after for quite a while qnd made possible by a single disobedient japanese engineer.

But that's the point of some discoveries, practical implications aren't necessarily immediately obvious. Like who could predict that Tesla's discovery of the rotating magnetic field would lead to us being able to diagnose bodies better with MRIs a century later?
 
I know many of you are men, but it's not some teal color.

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This is a teal palette, between each of those colors, there are more, many already named that we can perceive. They vary in tint, saturation, whatever.

They've discovered one that our eyes can't detect.

It's like when hubs calls lilac, violet, burgundy all "purple".
Penisniggers have inferior eyes. They can't tell colors apart because they lack souls, and thus can't fully interact with the world or experience God's beauty. You are correct, but trying to explain this to them is futile.
 
Penisniggers have inferior eyes. They can't tell colors apart because they lack souls, and thus can't fully interact with the world or experience God's beauty. You are correct, but trying to explain this to them is futile.
Q: Oh you moid, can't you see all these beautiful shades of brown?
A: They all look like niggers to me.
 
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Isn't it like saying that they found new sensations by putting a needle through your brain? You aren't really seeing new colour, just corrupted code.
 
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This is so dumb nigga that is turquoise.
"bu-bubut !t's legally d!st!nct because WE SAW 1T AFTER SHOOT1NG SOME GUY 1N THE EYES AND HE SAW THE COLOR! ! FUCK!NG LOVE SCOYENCE ! LOVE THE COPYR!GHT SYSTE!M!!!"
 
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