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Because the color scale includes black, representing just over 20 unlabeled units, it is possible that the graph axes, labels, and perhaps even the comic's caption represent measured values. Because they don't blend continuously with the negative space around them, this appears unlikely.
 
Because the color scale includes black, representing just over 20 unlabeled units, it is possible that the graph axes, labels, and perhaps even the comic's caption represent measured values. Because they don't blend continuously with the negative space around them, this appears unlikely.
  
Real-world analogues to the Painbow Award include radar meteorology charts, where different types of precipitation have different color schemes that can overlap and blend in confusing transition zones. In the field of data visualization, the {{w|CIELAB color space}}, [https://bids.github.io/colormap/ perceptually uniform color spaces], or even more [https://ai.googleblog.com/2019/08/turbo-improved-rainbow-colormap-for.html specialized] [http://www.kennethmoreland.com/color-maps/ scales] have been developed to replace simple algebraic interpolation of red, green, and blue values.
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Real-world analogues to the Painbow Award include radar meteorology charts, where different types of precipitation have different color schemes that can overlap and blend in confusing transition zones. In the field of data visualization, the {{w|CIELAB color space}}, [https://bids.github.io/colormap/ perceptually uniform color spaces], or even more [https://ai.googleblog.com/2019/08/turbo-improved-rainbow-colormap-for.html specialised] [http://www.kennethmoreland.com/color-maps/ scales] have been developed to replace simple algebraic interpolation of red, green, and blue values.
  
The title text takes the concept of bad color combinations further, suggesting the use of navy blue (<span style="color:white;background-color: navy;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>), dark blue (<span style="color:white;background-color: darkblue;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>), and midnight blue (<span style="color:white;background-color: midnightblue;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>) for first, second, and third respectively. These are the names of three similar [https://xkcd.com/color/rgb/ xkcd colors], and, as [[315: Braille|sighted readers]] will be able to see, there is very little difference between them {{Citation needed}}. However, the choice of blue(s) may be a direct play upon the association of the {{w|Blue Riband}} (a.k.a. "Blue Ribbon") and/or {{w|Le Cordon Bleu|Cordon Bleu}} (likewise, but this time direct from the French) awards, extended in common use for excellence across a much wider range of competitive fields.
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The title text takes the concept of bad color combinations further, suggesting the use of <span style="color:white;background-color: #001146;">navy blue</span>, <span style="color:white;background-color: #00035b;">dark blue</span>, and <span style="color:white;background-color: #020035;">midnight blue</span> for first, second, and third respectively. These are the names of three similar [https://xkcd.com/color/rgb/ XKCD colors], and, as [[315: Braille|sighted readers]] will be able to see, there is very little difference between them {{Citation needed}}. However, the choice of blue(s) may be a direct play upon the association of the {{w|Blue Riband}} (a.k.a. "Blue Ribbon") and/or {{w|Le Cordon Bleu|Cordon Bleu}} (likewise, but this time direct from the French) awards, extended in common use for excellence across a much wider range of competitive fields.
  
 
For rosette-rewarded competitions (e.g. livestock parades, dog-shows, etc) the {{w|Blue ribbon|first prize ones are commonly blue}} (red for 2<sup>nd</sup> and either yellow or white for 3<sup>rd</sup>), though it may not be logically obvious to someone unfamiliar with this, perhaps more used to yellow depicting the 'gold standard, first place' indicator or red as the most alerting hue in some other ranking situations. Where a depicted award schema ''is'' directly gold/silver/bronze-influenced, however, the gold and bronze 'metallic off-yellows' can sometimes be more confused with each other than with the mid-level desaturated 'silver'
 
For rosette-rewarded competitions (e.g. livestock parades, dog-shows, etc) the {{w|Blue ribbon|first prize ones are commonly blue}} (red for 2<sup>nd</sup> and either yellow or white for 3<sup>rd</sup>), though it may not be logically obvious to someone unfamiliar with this, perhaps more used to yellow depicting the 'gold standard, first place' indicator or red as the most alerting hue in some other ranking situations. Where a depicted award schema ''is'' directly gold/silver/bronze-influenced, however, the gold and bronze 'metallic off-yellows' can sometimes be more confused with each other than with the mid-level desaturated 'silver'
  
 
==Transcript==
 
==Transcript==
:[A figure of a graph is shown, the figure has a number as if used in a paper. The graph has two labeled axis, however they have no units. The Y-Axis has 15 ticks of equal length, the X-axis has 21 ticks, with every fifth double the height of the other. The graph displays a messy shape with color gradients, with a bright spot to the right of the shape around the middle right part of the graph. This bright spot is surrounded by mainly green and red, with darker colors at the edge, and the rest of the graph white. On the right side of the graph there is a labeled bar with the color scale. To the right of this are numbers indicating what the color represents. The color scale begins at the bottom with white, then goes to gray/blue, to black, back to blue, to gray, to green, to dark red, to red which fades via brown in to green, from where it fades slowly from darker green to lighter green ending up as yellow before going back to white again at the top.]
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:[A figure of a graph is shown, the figure has a number as if used in a paper. The graph has two labeled axis but without any units given. The Y-Axis has 15 ticks of equal length, the X-axis has 21 ticks, with every fifth double the height of the other. The graph displays a messy shape with color gradients, with a bright spot to the right of the shape around the middle right part of the graph. This bright spot is surrounded by mainly green and red, with darker colors at the edge, and the rest of the graph white. On the right side of the graph there is a labeled bar with the color scale. To the right of this are numbers indicating what the color represents. The color scale begins at the bottom with white, then goes to gray/blue, to black, back to blue, to gray, to green, to dark red, to red which fades via brown in to green, from where it fades slowly from darker green to lighter green ending up as yellow before going back to white again at the top.]
 
:Label: <u>Figure 2</u>
 
:Label: <u>Figure 2</u>
 
:Y-Axis: λ
 
:Y-Axis: λ
 
:X-Axis: θ (phase)
 
:X-Axis: θ (phase)
 
:Scale label: Peak Energy
 
:Scale label: Peak Energy
:120 (White)
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:120
:100 (Green)
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:100
:80 (Darker green)
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:80
:60 (Red)
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:60
:40 (Green)
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:40
:20 (Black)
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:20
:0 (White)
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:0
  
 
:[Caption under the panel:]
 
:[Caption under the panel:]

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