yes,but you cannot light up over or a 60 watt light bulb it has to be below 60 watts
Except white and black all colors absorb a part of light and reflect an other one.
Yes it does: otherwise you would not be able to see it.
Opaque
An opaque object does not reflect light. Opaque objects absorb light.
Any object you can see reflects light. If it did not reflect any light it would be invisible. Similarly, no object is so reflective that it reflects all light. The proof that it absorbs light is that it increses in temperature as it is exposed to light.
Pigments act differently from light because they reflect their own color and all the others absorb.
Blue appears black under a yellow light. For example if you have a blue car and you put a yellow light on it will appear black due to the absence of color. The light has nothing to reflect back.
carotenoids
White surfaces reflect light and heat. Black surfaces do not reflect light and they absorb heat.White surfaces reflect light and heat. Black surfaces do not reflect light and they absorb heat.White surfaces reflect light and heat. Black surfaces do not reflect light and they absorb heat.White surfaces reflect light and heat. Black surfaces do not reflect light and they absorb heat.
carotenoids: absorb blue- violet chlorophyll: absorb red and also blue-violet reflect red-yellow reflect green
Carotenoids reflect yellow-orange light and absorb blue-green light.
well,yes it does.As you know light has visible colors when it refract it's light,Red, Orange, Yellow, Green, Blue, Indigo and violet. you can shortcut-ed as (ROYGBIV )in pattern.so when you light a white light to any material so it absorbs another and reflect its's own nature color. for instance:when you light or rays white light to the orange paper so it will absorb another and reflect orange color.
They reflect orange light.
Reflect.
absorb.Black absorb heat faster than any other colour.Black will never reflect light.:)
Optical storage devices are coded with areas that reflect and absorb laser light.
Opaque
true
Black surfaces absorb all light. White surfaces do not "reflect black" as there's no such thing as black light.