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It is called 'polarized light' .
polarized light
If red light passed through the filter, then it would not be a blue filter. When a broad range of colors encounters the blue filter, by far the greatest share of the light that comes out of the other side is blue light, with very small amounts of other colors.
After pure, white light passes through a red filter, all the other colors in the spectrum will flow out of the other side. My mistake, I had a faulty source. A red light filter will cause the image to appear as different shades of red. Since it is a red filter only red light can pass through. So you finish up with red light. Whether it is focussed to an image or not is of no consequence. As to different shades of red, you will get the shade of red that is passed by the filter.
I'm guessing it was probably the GREEN light, and that somehow it had something to do with why the filter was named a "GREEN" filter, and why when you looked at it, it looked GREEN.
The filtrate is what's passed through a filter.
A filtrate is the liquid that has passed through a filter.
its a substance through partial light gets passed and partial gets reflected
Such light is said to be polarized.
It is called 'polarized light' .
Filtrate. the ones trapped by the filter paper is called the residue
none if the source is purely violet and the filter is 100% red.
horizontal waves only
It will have been dispersed into the spectrum
Light can either be reflected, absorbed, or passed through. It depends on the object it is pointed towards what category it will fall in.
polarized light
Light can either be reflected, absorbed, or passed through. It depends on the object it is pointed towards what category it will fall in.