this question is wrong for three reasons.1, The type of matter determines its capacity or incapacity for storing or releasing heat.2,a "sample" is very much to vague to apply measure to or from.3 heat is relative.
This depends for each solution.
solution
it is about the absorbing center. It contains photosynthetic pigments.
The point at which the greatest possible amount of a substance has been absorbed by a solution at a given temperature. Any excess amount of that substance will "fall out" of the solution as a precipitate. Saturation point occurs when water being evaporated equals the amount being condensed. -Qwasas
Only in patterns of darkness can you not see invisible absorbed light.
The solution is absorbed onto a piece of paper
The buffer solution is destroyed if the amount of acid or base that can be absorbed is exceded.
When a strong beam of light is passed through a colloidal solution, then scattering of light is absorbed.
Google a Spectrophotometer
A part of this light is absorbed.
orange-red
solution
The light is absorbed and change to tiny amount of heat
The light is absorbed and change to tiny amount of heat
The light is absorbed and changed to tiny amount of heat.
It absorbed and changed to tiny amount of heat.
Red is reflected. All the rest of the colors hitting the solution are absorbed.
Colorimetry is the measurement of the wavelength and the intensity of electromagnetic radiation in the visible region of the spectrum. Colorimetry can help find the concentration of substances, since the amount and colour of the light that is absorbed or transmitted depends on properties of the solution, including the concentration of particles in it. A colorimeter is an instrument that compares the amount of light getting through a solution with the amount that can get through a sample of pure solvent. A colorimeter contains a photocell is able to detect the amount of light which passes through the solution under investigation. The more light that hits the photocell, the higher the current it produces, hence showing the absorbance of light. A colorimeter takes 3 wideband readings along the visible spectrum to obtain a rough estimate of a color sample. Pigments absorb light at different wavelengths.