The wavelengths are corresponded to the color of the light. A blue object will reflect any light radiation expect the color blue. It will absorb the blue light.
It will be seen as blue colour.
Black, because the blue light would be absorbed into the object's pigment and as there is no green light to reflect, the object would appear black.
In red light a blue object appears black because there is no blue light for it to reflect, while black resembles the absence of all color.
Red and blue are primary colours therefore they do not contain any other colour. When a blue light is shone onto a red object, all the blue light is absorbed by the red object, and as no red light is being shone for the red object to reflect, no light will be reflected from it and it will appear to be black. It is important to remember that physical colours will only reflect it's light colour equivalent. All other colours are absorbed. So red will reflect red, green will reflect green, and red will absorb green and so on.
Assuming that the light you are shining on the object is white, then the object is also blue. Objects appear a certain color because they reflect that color to our eyes and the rest of the colors in the light are absorbed by the object.
It will be seen as blue colour.
Black, because the blue light would be absorbed into the object's pigment and as there is no green light to reflect, the object would appear black.
In red light a blue object appears black because there is no blue light for it to reflect, while black resembles the absence of all color.
Red and blue are primary colours therefore they do not contain any other colour. When a blue light is shone onto a red object, all the blue light is absorbed by the red object, and as no red light is being shone for the red object to reflect, no light will be reflected from it and it will appear to be black. It is important to remember that physical colours will only reflect it's light colour equivalent. All other colours are absorbed. So red will reflect red, green will reflect green, and red will absorb green and so on.
Assuming that the light you are shining on the object is white, then the object is also blue. Objects appear a certain color because they reflect that color to our eyes and the rest of the colors in the light are absorbed by the object.
If it didn't reflect blue, then there wouldn't be any blue light from it to enter your eye,and you wouldn't see any blue.If the object looks blue, then you know two things:1). There was some blue light hitting the object.2). The blue light hitting the object wasn't all absorbed. At leastsome of it was reflected from the object, toward your eye.
On stage in a theatre red light shines and clothes appear red, blue light is shone an clothes appear blue, what colour are they?
A color such as "light blue" tells us how the object will react to visible light. Basically, it doesn't say anything about how it will react to infrared radiation.
Basically three things can happen to light as it strikes an object. It can be reflected, absorbed, or it can pass through. For simplicity, assume the object is not transparent; in that case, any light that is not reflected is absorbed.
Light is a spectrum. On one end it is red and the other blue. We see light in this spectrum as waves and if it is blue, the object is coming toward us. If the waves are red than it is moving away. The frequency of these waves tell us how fast and object is moving toward or away from us.
a blue object reflects blue it absorbs the rest of the colors
You can see an object because white light reflects off the object. If you are looking at an orange in blue light, for example, you would see black because the orange is absorbing the blue light. So, for you to see an object, light of the same color has reflect off of it. White light is composed of all the colors of light.