I apologise if Im having a little rant here, but there is some dodgy terminology knocking around here.
Black light no such thing, its a phrase used by DJs - you are talking about ultraviolet light.
The visible portion of the electromagnetic spectrum extends from around 400 nm (nanometres) (the blue end) to around 700 nm (the red end).
Infra-red light has a wavelength longer than 700 nm, ultraviolet light has a wavelength shorter than 400 nm.
280 nm near ultraviolet wavelength
380-420 nm wavelength of violet light
420-440 nm wavelength of indigo light
440-500 nm wavelength of blue light
500-520 nm wavelength of cyan light
520-565 nm wavelength of green light
565-590 nm wavelength of yellow light
590-625 nm wavelength of orange light
625-740 nm wavelength of red light
The whole rods and cones thing is a bit of a misnomer. It is an explanation of observed TYPICAL responses of the eye. BUT there are a number of simple practical demonstrations whose results are unexplainable using the rods and cones argument. Their working is not yet fully understood.
Finally, then Ill wind my neck in, night vision.
Night vision is not about using red or green light. Night Vision or SCOTOPIC vision if a physiological effect which is triggered when ambient luminance levels drop below around 10-2 to 10-6 cd/m². (Candela per metre squared)
It is an evolutionary effect, at night, when we are illuminated by light reflected from the moon, the light we receive has been partially absorbed by the moons surface and has been further diffused and therefore less of the lower energy red end of the spectrum arrives at the earths surface. This is a similar reason why things underwater get progressively bluer the deeper you go, the red light is absorbed.
We have evolved to become more blue sensitive when it gets dark. Its triggered by light levels not its colour. If you illuminate your night scene with high intensity red light, you will loose your night vision because the ambient illuminations levels will retrigger your photopic vision. Because the eye is more blue sensitive, if we illuminated our scene with white light, the blue component of it would fool the Mk1 eyeball into thinking it was brighter than it really was and we would loose the scotopic effect. Illuminating with a small amount of red light is relatively ignored by the eyes metering ability so does not impact on our night vision but does illuminate the scene and is sensed by the red sensitive receptors in the eye. Things are not monochrome at night because thats the way the eye works, its because you are viewing something illuminated by monochrome (in this case blue) light.
Rant over I like torches theyre gadgets