A well known property of human vision, known as color constancy , is the ability to correct for color deviations caused by a difference in illumination. A common approach to investigate color constant behavior is by psychophysical experiments, regarding the human visual system as a black box responding to a well defined change in an laboratory setup. A fundamental problem in psychophysical experiments is that significant conclusion are hard to draw due to the complex experimental environment necessary to examine color constancy. An alternative approach to reveal the mechanisms involved in color constancy is by modeling the physical process of spectral image formation. In this paper, we aim at a physical basis for color constancy rather than...