In the back of your eyeball is an area called the retina, which is where light is converted into nerve signals and transmitted to your brain. The retina is made up of two different sensors- rods and cones. Cones are the named thus for their shape. They are responsible for distinguishing different wavelengths of light and interpreting them into a nerve signal. The signal is carried to the back of your brain (the occipital lobe) where these signals are interpreted by you as a color. Those who are colorblind either lack cones or have some deficiency related to their cone sensors.
With your eyes unless you are colorblind. The cone cells enable you to see colors.
Your eyes see different colors because of the way light is absorbed and reflected by objects. Different colors are created when light of different wavelengths enters your eyes and is processed by your brain.
Blackness.
Green
I think at a certain age there eyes get used to colors, like when you wake up and your eyes get used to the light.
Yes, wasps can see and identify colors. They have compound eyes that allow them to see a wide range of colors, including ultraviolet light.
They say they can see colors of green, yellow, and blue.
It is impossible to see colors in the dark, as our eyes need light to interpret colors.
Your eyes perceive different colors because of the way light is absorbed and reflected by objects. Different colors are created by the varying wavelengths of light that are absorbed and reflected by the objects you see. Your eyes then interpret these different wavelengths as different colors.
We see colors thanks to specialized cells in our eyes called cones. Cones are sensitive to different wavelengths of light and allow us to perceive the different colors of the visible light spectrum. When light enters our eyes, it is processed by these cones and translated into the vibrant array of colors we see.
because its justt the way our eyes see things. -jh'(:
Humans see different colors of light because of the way our eyes process different wavelengths of light. The cells in our eyes called cones are sensitive to different wavelengths, which correspond to different colors. When light enters our eyes, these cones send signals to our brain that allow us to perceive different colors.