Yes
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.
The object reflects all the incident light.
Having a non-luminous body means that it is not a see-through body. Many insects have a non-luminous body. Non-luminous body also means an object that cannot reflect light.
Assuming that the light you are shining on the object is white, then the object is also blue. Objects appear a certain color because they reflect that color to our eyes and the rest of the colors in the light are absorbed by the object.
The dominant color of a nonluminous flame on a Bunsen burner is blue. Whereas, the dominant color of a luminous flame on a Bunsen burner is orange.
Yes
You reduce the supply of fuel. A "yellow" flame is a lot cooler than a "blue" flame. As it pertains to Chemistry, the dominant color for a nonluminous flame (yellow) is blue.
The color of an object is a result of how that object interacts with light. Objects reflect, absorb, and transmit certain wavelengths of light, which our eyes perceive as color. The color is not within the object itself, but rather is a perception created by our visual system based on the light interacting with the object.
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.
True, color is just the light that an object is reflecting.
The apparent color of the object.
The apparent color of the object.
The object reflects all the incident light.
yes
[object Object]
[object Object]