it would look brown because of the grrs
violet, becasue of how the colours react to each other and how they work together to form green.
A green object would look blaack in a red light because coloured objects absorb all colours except the colour they are, so a green object absorbs 6 colours (red, orange, yellow, blue, indigo, violet) and reflects 1 (green). In this situation, there is no green light to reflect and it can't reflect other colours, so it looks black. :)
i think that the carrot would still look orange as the blue light absorbs blue light obly not orange so it will still look ornge:-) Good Luck
ghgj
Directly under the streetlight there is no shadow. If an object is not directly under the light then the shadow starts at the base of the object and points away from the light.
It will be green
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
probably a yellowy green !!
Green because you only perceive colors of objects by the colors of light they reflect into your eye.
Not much different. It probably would just have this green-ish tint to it.
violet, becasue of how the colours react to each other and how they work together to form green.
A green object would look blaack in a red light because coloured objects absorb all colours except the colour they are, so a green object absorbs 6 colours (red, orange, yellow, blue, indigo, violet) and reflects 1 (green). In this situation, there is no green light to reflect and it can't reflect other colours, so it looks black. :)
White light is made up of equal parts of three primary colours; red, green, and blue (Or RGB). A banana will absorb the blue light, and then all that is left is the red and green. If you mix red and green together, you get a gold-yellow sort of colour, the same colour as a banana.
If the light is or contains the colour the object it is striking, then the object will appear to be the colour it originally is. If the light is not or does not contain the colour the object it is striking, then object will appear black. This is because an object will only reflect the light that is the same colour as it, all other light is absorbed. For example: Red, yellow, magenta, and white light will make a red object appear red as they all contain red light. Blue, green and cyan light will make a red object appear black.
brown
Yes, but it is not nesicarally green rock that glows under black light. Some rock are florescent and glow (under black light). Most of these rocks appear green, but not nesicarally all of them.
because under red light ther is no green light for the to reflet ☻ ☺