In that case, most of it will be absorbed.
In that case, most of it will be absorbed.
In that case, most of it will be absorbed.
In that case, most of it will be absorbed.
In that case, most of it will be absorbed.
The blue light turns turqoise shining of the green object
Blue light is reflected, other colors are absorbed.
The light shines through but only blurry so you cannot see the outline aswell Hope this helps x
the black absorbs it in Answer Any black object will reflect back light because of the friction particles that are on its surface, these will reflect back the light which shines upon it. It is said that black is the absence of color but we see it as the color black. The same goes for white light which is a combination of all colors but we see it as the color white. A black object will always reflect some light.
a green object it will reflect a green light and will absorb all other colours.
The blue light turns turqoise shining of the green object
black
Blue light is reflected, other colors are absorbed.
The light shines through but only blurry so you cannot see the outline aswell Hope this helps x
the black absorbs it in Answer Any black object will reflect back light because of the friction particles that are on its surface, these will reflect back the light which shines upon it. It is said that black is the absence of color but we see it as the color black. The same goes for white light which is a combination of all colors but we see it as the color white. A black object will always reflect some light.
a green object it will reflect a green light and will absorb all other colours.
it reflects violet and absorbs the other colors
White light contains all the wavelengths of the visible spectrum at equal intensity. The different colors of light, except violet, are absorbed when white light shines on an opaque violet object. The violet color is reflected.
When white light shines onto a violet object, the violet part of white light reflects off of the object, causing you to see violet. White light it ROYGBIV, which is the colours of the rainbow (red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet). So white light IS the combination of ALL of these colours.
The photons all get absorbed. None of them make it to the other side to escape.
the black object absorbs most of the light. Theoretically nothing can be truly black because if it were truly black, we could not see it.
The light from the sun, which is made up of equal parts of red, green and blue (even though it may not look it), will be reflected off of the white surface, staying white as the white surface reflects equal parts of red, green and blue.