If light travels through an object, it is still called light. If you want to specify, you might say "light travelling through an object".
Electrons are able to travel close to speed of light.
When light waves traveling in one direction are made to travel in many different directions, it is called light scattering. This can occur when light interacts with particles or objects and is redirected in multiple directions.
Heat waves traveling at the speed of light are called RADIATION! :)
An object that does not give out light is called a non-luminous object. This means that the object does not emit its own light but rather reflects light from another source. An example of a non-luminous object is a table.
An object that doesn't give out light is called a non-luminous object. These objects do not emit their own light but can reflect light from other sources.
An object that allows light to pass through it is called a transparent object.
When light bounces off an object, it is called reflection.
An Object which reflects light is called an illuminous object. e.g) The Moon: Reflects off sunlight
An object that produces no light is called a non-luminous object. These objects do not emit any visible light of their own but may reflect or transmit light from other sources.
When light passes through an object, we say it is transmitted. Transparent objects transmit a lot of light. basically it is called shadow
Nobody knows for sure. We have never witnessed a physical object traveling faster than the speed of light.
A visible object.