It would be black becasue the object would absorb all the red light, and there would be no green light for it to reflect
A green object under green light would appear its original color and shade of green. When an object is illuminated by light of the same color, no new colors are absorbed or reflected, resulting in the object appearing unchanged.
If an object is white in sunlight it will be green in green light. A white object reflects all wavelengths (colors) of light that shine on it. If only green light shines on it, that color will be reflected and the object will look green.
No, under green light a red object will still appear red. This is because the color of an object is determined by the wavelengths of light it reflects, and green light does not change the wavelengths that a red object reflects.
It would appear black because the object would not reflect any of the colors of light back.
When a green apple appears black under a red light, it is because the red light does not contain wavelengths that correspond to the green color of the apple. The red light is absorbed by the apple, causing it to appear black as there is no green light being reflected off the surface to be perceived by our eyes. Each color of light corresponds to a specific wavelength, and when the light's wavelength does not match the object's color, the object will appear different.
A green object will appear dark or black under blue light because it does not reflect blue light well. Green objects absorb blue light, resulting in little to no reflection of this color.
A cyan object will appear black under red light because red light is absorbed by cyan objects. Cyan is a combination of green and blue light, so when only red light is present, there is no light for the cyan object to reflect or absorb.
The blue sky would appear green under green light because the green light would dominate the color seen by our eyes. The color of the sky is determined by the light that is reflected off of it, so when green light is shone on a blue sky, the green light will be the dominant color that is reflected.
A green object is called "green" because that's the only color of light that it reflects to our eyes, while it absorbs any other light. If there's no green light shining on it, then there's nothing for it to reflect, and we would describe it as a "black" object under those conditions.
A lemon would appear green under green light because the object reflects the color of light that it does not absorb. In this case, a lemon's yellow color would absorb all other colors except green, which it would reflect.
It is either green because the colour of light above it is the only colour it allows through like in this case Green light only lets green through or it could be cyan as blue and green make cyan but i think it would be green
Why do you call it a "white object" ? Could it be because it looks white under white light ... light composed of every color ? Well then, the object must reflect every color. So it appears to be the color of whatever light you illuminate it with. Yellow under yellow light, etc.