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a diaphrgam is part of a microscope that controls brightness or light on the object you are looking at.
The brightness of a color is called colorfulness, in the fashion and paint world. In the electronic world, and perhaps other disciplines, the brightness of a color is called saturation. In both instances, the brightness of a color is achieved through the removal of black, leaving only the pure color. Taken to the extreme, the brightest a color can be is often called fluorescent color.
intensity
The answer is "Color"
No. If the object absorbs that color, then there's none left to travelfrom there to your eyes, is there !The color you see is the light that the object couldn'tabsorb, so itbounced from the object to your eyes.
a diaphrgam is part of a microscope that controls brightness or light on the object you are looking at.
The diaphragm controls the brightness of a microscope.
Intensity refers to the brightness or dullness of a color such as a bright yellow or a dull yellow.
Contrast is the difference in light and/or gloss that hits an object distinguishable. In ocular perception of the real world, contrast is resolved by the difference in the color and brightness of the object and other.
The brightness of a color is called colorfulness, in the fashion and paint world. In the electronic world, and perhaps other disciplines, the brightness of a color is called saturation. In both instances, the brightness of a color is achieved through the removal of black, leaving only the pure color. Taken to the extreme, the brightest a color can be is often called fluorescent color.
Anything that is not the measure of intrinsic brightness of a celestial object.
Their Color!(:
intensity
color brightness
[object Object]
its color :)
color