Sweet Sounds

VEHICLE IMPROVEMENT PROFESSIONALS

1418 N. Riverfront Dr. Mankato, MN
  
Contact Us: (507) 345-8863
  • Home
  • Services
    • Car Audio
    • Custom Fabrication
    • Driving Safety
    • Factory Audio System Repair
    • Factory Radio Integration
    • Heated Seat Installation
    • Installation Services
    • Lighting
    • Marine Audio
    • Mobile Video
    • Motorcycle Audio
    • Remote Start
    • Window Tint
  • Gallery
  • About Us
    • Why Choose Us
    • Meet The Team
    • Job Openings
    • Hours and Directions
  • Sales & Promos
  • Blog
    • Articles
    • Featured Installations
    • Installations
    • Products
  • Space for Lease
  • Contact Us
  • You are here: Home / ARTICLES / Understanding the Science Behind Automotive Headlight Bulb Colors

    Understanding the Science Behind Automotive Headlight Bulb Colors

    October 16, 2022 By BestCarAudio.com Leave a Comment

    Headlight Color

    When it comes to lighting the road in front of your car or truck at night, most enthusiasts focus on light intensity instead of headlight bulb color. It’s straightforward to see the difference between yellowish light produced by incandescent halogen bulbs and the white/blue output of HID or LED bulbs. The science behind these light sources is interestingly similar to what professional car audio technicians measure to calibrate a digital signal processor in your mobile audio system. If you’re intrigued, read on, and we’ll explain in detail.

    How Light Works

    There have been many detailed scientific dissertations on how light works. These papers explain the electron and sub-electron concepts that allow us to see objects. In short, light is made of photons. Photons are packets of electrons that have been released from atoms. These packets of photons have energy and momentum but have no mass. This means you can shine a light at an object to illuminate it, but the energy from the light source doesn’t make the object heavier.

    If we excite a group of atoms, the negatively charged electrons that orbit the nucleus absorb that energy. As more energy is added to an atom, the electrons circle faster and farther away from the center. When the energy source (electricity or heat) is removed, the electrons snap back to their original orbit path but release that added energy in the form of photons. Under specific conditions, the photons that are released produce visible light. If you studied electrical theory in high school, you’d recognize this pattern as similar to how electricity works. The only difference is that electricity involves electrons jumping from one atom to another to transfer energy.

    When the light photons escape from an atom, they can have varying energy levels depending on the electron’s position when it leaves the atom. You can think of this as the photons having a specific resonant frequency. As a result, different types of atoms release photons of different wavelengths. The result is differently colored light sources.

    Light and Color

    We know that light sources have different colors. An incandescent bulb gives off a very different kind of light than a fluorescent bulb, a gas-discharge arc lamp (high-intensity discharge or HID) or a light-emitting diode (LED). Some light sources appear yellow, while others are white or blue. How these light sources illuminate objects can make them look very different.

    Let’s take a giant step sideways. You’ve seen plenty of rainbows, but do you know what turns the supposedly white light from the sun into a color pattern that shifts from violet through to blue, green, yellow, orange and red? Water molecules refract the light from the sun. Because white light is made up of many different wavelengths, and each is reflected at a different angle as it passes through the water molecules, the light is divided into its primary components. Sorry, I know. We got all technical again.

    Headlight Color
    Our friend Jeremy Lambertson from Driven SS in Marquette, Michigan, and his wife, Carrie, snapped this photo of a rainbow after a Cars and Coffee event.

    An expensive-for-its-size electronic device called a spectral illuminance analyzer or a spectrometer can analyze the frequency content of a light source. The spectrometer works precisely the same way that a real-time audio analyzer (RTA) looks at the amplitude of the different sound frequencies produced by an audio source. As you may have guessed, we’ve added one to the BestCarAudio.com lab.

    Headlight Color
    An audio analyzer like the venerable AudioControl SA-3052 will show a user the relative loudness of each 1/3-octave band of frequencies across the range of human hearing.
    Headlight Color
    Our spectrometer shows us how much energy is contained at the different wavelengths from a light source.
    Headlight Color
    The view when we took the light measurement posted above.
    Headlight Color
    Spectrographic analysis on a bright sunny day with the sun almost at its highest point in the sky.
    Headlight Color
    The view during our measurement of a bright sunny day with very few clouds in the sky.

    If you compare the two spectrographic measurements, you can see that the water vapor in the clouds is blocking increasing amounts of green, yellow, orange and red light. Unsurprisingly, we are left with a light source that makes everything look dull. This is because the water vapor in the air has quite literally filtered out the light energy that makes colors pop.

    The software scales the measurement window to make it easy to see energy levels at different wavelengths. This is similar to the way our eyes or the iris and shutter on a camera work together to deliver a similar level of perceived brightness for a given lighting condition. The chart below shows both measurements overlaid, one on top of the other. You can see that the overall brightness level on a cloudy day is significantly lower.

    The measured light level was 106,252 lux on a sunny day, whereas the cloudy day was only 9,069 lux. Converted to candlepower, the numbers are 9,874 and 843.

    Headlight Color
    A comparison of energy levels between a sunny and a cloudy day in Southern Ontario.

    Headlight Bulb Color

    When it comes to the headlights on your car or truck, bulbs come in various colors for a variety of reasons. At the incandescent end of the spectrum, most have a yellowish look. With that said, halogen bulbs (which use iodine and bromine gas) have less yellow and produce more light output than old bulbs that use argon. Here’s the spectrographic analysis of a relatively simple halogen light bulb.

    Headlight Color
    Spectrographic analysis of a Wagner 1156 turn signal bulb.

    As you can see, there is a lot of energy in the red portion of the light spectrum produced by this bulb. To be clear, it’s not an amber bulb, though; we should find one of those and test it as well.

    Headlight Color
    Our Wagner 1157 is a classic incandescent bulb that produces warm yellow light.

    OK, we’re back from the hardware store with a pair of Sylvania 3057AK amber turn signal bulbs. The graph below shows their spectral energy.

    Headlight Color
    A Sylvania 3057AK has a dark amber coating. The amount of blue light passed from the filament is dramatically reduced.

    How we perceive the color of a light source is dependent on the frequency content of the energy coming from the bulb. Warm light will have more red energy, where a cool bulb will be bluer.

    Color Temperature and Color Space

    If you’ve ever shopped for HID headlight bulbs, you know their color is often described by a specific Kelvin value. For example, a yellow fog light bulb might be rated at 3,000 K, where a factory-installed HID or LED bulb might be a very pure white rated at 6,000 K. Those bulbs with a very blue tint are often up in the 8,000-10,000 K range.

    Most people think these values are somewhat arbitrary, but the reality is, the light color can be measured with impressive accuracy using the right equipment. Our spectrometer can do this quickly and easily. The software will also plot the measurement on what’s called a color space chart. The chart outlines the level of red, green and blue in the light source and uses X and Y coordinates to describe the location on a chart. For our testing, we’ll use the CIE 1931 color space chart. The image below shows us where our measurement of the Wagner bulb falls.

    Headlight Color
    Our Wagner bulb measurement yielded an X value of 0.4246 and a Y value of 0.3985.
    Headlight Color
    The Sylvania bulb measured at 0.5590 for an X-value and 0.4305 for a Y-value.

    The software tells us the Wagner light source has a correlated color temperature of 3,174 kelvins. As mentioned, that’s considered a warm yellowish light. The amber Sylvania bulb has a color temperature of 1,857 and falls into the orange and red portion of the light spectrum.

    White Light Isn’t Always Made Up Of All Frequencies

    The last item we’ll touch on in this article is a bit of a tease toward some future content we are working on. If you’re reading this, then you’re likely looking at a computer or smartphone screen. The light created by that screen is made up of tiny red, green and blue pixels. The colors you see depend on the intensity of each of those pixels. If the screen is to be blue, then only the blue pixels will be illuminated. For violet, the red and blue will be turned on. Yellow is produced by red and green. You can easily see this pattern by looking at the CIE 1931 color space images above.

    What might be surprising to some is that the perception of white can be made up of specific amounts of red, green and blue light. The chart below shows a measurement of the light produced by the laptop screen on which this article was created.

    Headlight Color
    The spectrographic content of our laptop screen with an all-white image.

    Behold! Our Dell XPS 13 laptop screen is perceived as white, yet it’s primarily red, very light green and mostly blue light. Here’s how the white light it produces measures on the CIE 1931 chart.

    Headlight Color
    The white light produced by our laptop screen was measured with an X value of 0.3095 and a Y value of 0.3310.

    Our screen has a correlated color temperature of 6,662 K. If we were scoring it on even whiteness, that’d be an excellent result. But does this score mean it’s a perfect source of white light? Absolutely not! We’ll leave you to ponder that thought as we prepare the next few articles.

    Lead-in Image: Thanks to Josh Matthews for sharing this photo of an Acura RSX equipped with decidedly blue headlights.

    This article is written and produced by the team at www.BestCarAudio.com. Reproduction or use of any kind is prohibited without the express written permission of 1sixty8 media.

    Share this:

    • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
    • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
    • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
    • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email

    Related

    Filed Under: ARTICLES, Lighting, RESOURCE LIBRARY

    About BestCarAudio.com

    BestCarAudio.com is a showcase for the very best mobile electronics retailers in the world and a place to educate and inform interested consumers about existing and emerging technologies.

    Leave a Reply Cancel reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    Remote Start Packages

    Search Our Installs and Articles

    Why Choose Us?

    Why Choose Us

    Vast Experience and Expertise Counts The number one reason to choose Sweet Sounds is our vast experience that has provided us with the expertise to ensure your experience as a client is unmatched. … [Read More...]

    Car Audio

    Car Audio

    Enjoy Great Sound! At Sweet Sounds, we aim to deliver incredible sounding car audio systems. Whether it’s a set of replacement speakers, a subwoofer add-on or an entire reference-quality audio system … [Read More...]

    Join Our Email List

    Tags

    2008 2015 2016 2017 Alpine Amplifiers Android Auto Apple CarPlay ARC Audio AudioControl Backup Cameras Bluetooth Car Starter Chevy Compustar Digital Designs DroneMobile Drone Mobile Firstech Focal Ford Harley Davidson Heated Seats Kia Memphis Memphis Car Audio Momento Nissan Polaris Processors Radios Remote Car Starter Remote Start Road Glide Rockford Fosgate Sale SiriusXM Sony Speakers Stinger Street Glide Subwoofers Toyota window film window tint

    Location


    Get Directions to Sweet Sounds

    Connect With US

    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • Twitter
    • YouTube

    Hours

    Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday9:00 am – 5:00 pm

    Closed Saturday and Sunday

    Copyright © 2025 Sweet Sounds · Privacy Policy · Website by 1sixty8 media, inc. · Log in

     

    Loading Comments...