No, black absorbs all of the seven primary colors. White reflects it all, making the color white the presence of all colors.
Black is the absence of all color. White is the presence of all color. Therefore, black has no actual color.
No. White is the presence of all colors, black is the absence.
White is the presence of all color, black is the absence of color
No, the colour black is actually the absence of color.
blue-black color indicates the presence of starch
White is the presence of light of all colors. Black is the absence of light of any color.
black and white are not colors but pigimentsblack is the presence of all color and white is the absence of all colorA2 ooops wrong way round.black is the absence of any colour or light. White is the presence of all colours of light.
depends. if your talking about light.... no. black is the absence of all colors. if your talking about pigments (colors you can draw) its the presence of all colors.
Technically speaking, black is not a color at all. Color is the way we perceive light of a given frequency; if it has a wavelength that is, say, 510 nanometers, then we perceive green light. Black, however, is an absence of light. Therefore, black is not a color at all, rather, it is an absence of color. Unless you are speaking of subtractive colors - then black is the presence of all color and white is the absence of all color. Additive color is light - subtractive color is the color that light bouncing from an object creates.
In Iodine Test the color that will confirm the presence of starch is black,dark brown or very dark purple
Yes and no. Black is the presence of all colors and white is the absence of all colors. If something appears black it is because the surface is reflecting all colors. If is appears white it is because it is absorbing all the colors. The whole black is a color thing has been going on for so many years, but in reality both black and white are because they both absorb all colors and is the presence of colors.
If I am remembering my science classes correctly blue or black coloring indicated the presence of starch.