Not much different. It probably would just have this green-ish tint to it.
The object will appear to be magenta because it reflects red light (which corresponds to the magenta color) and blue light, while absorbing green light.
A cyan object will appear black when only magenta light is shone on it. Cyan objects absorb magenta light, so no light is being reflected back to our eyes, causing the object to appear black.
Green would appear black or very dark under magenta light because magenta light contains no green wavelengths to reflect back. Therefore, without green light to reflect, green objects would not be visible and would appear dark or black.
Magenta is the opposite color of green on the color wheel, so it absorbs green light. When magenta pigment is present, it absorbs green wavelengths of light, making magenta appear as a mixture of blue and red.
Magenta glass transmits red and blue light, but absorbs green light. As a result, the transmitted light would appear as a mix of red and blue, creating a magenta hue.
Red - Yellow light is a mixture of red and green light. When a magenta filter is placed in front of it, the filter would allow the red light through, but not the green, making it appear red through the filter. Anyone who listens to 'Anonymous' over me will see I am right when they pick up a set of filters.
A red light will be needed to combine with magenta light to produce green light. Green light is the complementary color to magenta, so by mixing red light with magenta light, the result will be green light.
Magenta Coloured light. If green and red are mixed then you get yellow light and if blue and green light are mixedd you get cyan couloured light. If green red and yellow are mixed you get white light. White light is mixed up of every single colour.
An opaque object that absorbs green light would appear magenta, which is the complementary color to green. This is because the object absorbs green light and reflects red and blue wavelengths, which combine to produce magenta.
Green and magenta light combine to create white light.
White light minus magenta light would appear cyan in color. Cyan is the complementary color to magenta, so when magenta light is subtracted from white light, the remaining color is cyan.
A pure green object would reflect the green third of the spectrum, and absorb the red and blue portions. Magenta light is composed of red and blue waves so they would be absorbed by the green object. Therefore, in theory, a green object would appear neutral, virtually black. But this assumes that all the colors are very pure and perfectly balanced. This is unlikely, so the object would most likely look near neutral with some color skewing one way or another.