No. Actually they ABSORB all colors of the visible spectrum except green and REFLECT green light.
Green objects absorb all the visible wave lengths exceptgreen, which they reflect.
chlorophyll
Plant cells contain organelles called chloroplasts, which contain pigments which absorb and reflect varying colors within the spectrum of visible light. The pigments in green plants absorb all colors of the visible light spectrum, except for green, which is reflected, giving the green color we see. The color of plants is dictated by which colors of the spectrum are reflected by the pigments in that particular plant's chloroplasts.
plants use red and blue light for photosysnthesis, green is reflected back by the chloroplasts in the leaves - green light is therefore not used for photosysnthesis
Pigments absorb certain colors of light, and reflect others. For example, chlorophyll is the pigment in plants which absorbs red and violet light, and relects green. This is why many plants appear green.
Carotenoids are a group of accessory pigments which occur in all photosynthetic organisms. They contain about forty carbon atoms, often without oxygen atoms and are fat soluble. They are chemically unrelated to chlorophyll and consist of rings connected by long chains of carbon atoms. They absorb light maximally at wavelengths between 460 and 550 nm and are therefore yellow, red or orange in colour as they reflect the wavelengths in this part of the spectrum. Carotenoids are found in all photosynthetic organisms.
Most terrestrial plants reflect the color green. The photosyntehtic parts of plants tend to absorb the color red.
Probably everything else that's not green.
Plant cells contain organelles called chloroplasts, which contain pigments which absorb and reflect varying colors within the spectrum of visible light. The pigments in green plants absorb all colors of the visible light spectrum, except for green, which is reflected, giving the green color we see. The color of plants is dictated by which colors of the spectrum are reflected by the pigments in that particular plant's chloroplasts.
They are the greens. That is why plants are green
Plants are green because they reflect green light more than any other part of the color spectrum, therefore if a plant is only exposed to green light it will reflect.
Yes. Plants mainly absorb light in the red and blue spectrum, and reflect the green spectrum (which is why leaves look green). The leaves and stems of a plant are green -- they are reflecting, not absorbing, green light. The colors that give the plant the most energy are at the purple end of the spectrum (red and blue) - those colors with the highest light energy. Blue light - responsible for vegetative or leaf growth (fluorescent light) Red plus Blue light - encourages flowering (full spectrum or "grow lights)
Plants are green because they reflect green light more than any other part of the color spectrum, therefore if a plant is only exposed to green light it will reflect more than if it were placed under a red light thereby making photosythensis less efficient. The colors that plants use during photosynthesis come from both ends of the light spectrum. The plants use the greens and yellows during germenation and it reflects it giving plants its color. It uses the other end with the blue and red by absorbing it and using it to create ATP energy and grow suffeciently.
The plants contain chlorophyll which in most cases has green dye in it. The plant appears green because they absorb all colors except green and reflect green.
Chlorophyll most heavily absorbs the blue and red spectrum.
The colors you see are actually the part of the visible spectrum that the object does not absorb. For example, plants appear green because they absorb every color except for green, therefore the visible light that reflects from the surface of a plant only retains the green part of the spectrum.
Plants are green because they reflect green light more than any other part of the color spectrum, therefore if a plant is only exposed to green light it will reflect more than if it were placed under a red light thereby making photosythensis less efficient. The colors that plants use during photosynthesis come from both ends of the light spectrum. The plants use the greens and yellows during germenation and it reflects it giving plants its color. It uses the other end with the blue and red by absorbing it and using it to create ATP energy and grow suffeciently.
A blue wall absorbs all colors in the spectrum except for blue! the blue light is reflected and that is what makes the wall look blue to us! same concept with a plant. A plant absorbs all colors for photosynthesis except for green, that green color is refelcted! therefore plants seem green to us!
Since it appears green in white light, it reflects the green part of the spectrum, absorbing all the other colors. In red light, it would not reflect any color, thus appearing black. Opaque objects absorb some of the light, and reflect the rest.