A yellow object reflects yellow light.
A yellow object under a yellow light will appear very bright and vibrant, as the object will reflect the light in a consistent color. This can potentially make it difficult to differentiate between the object and the surrounding light source.
The yellow object absorbs most of the light and reflects yellow light. White light is a combination of different colors, and the yellow object absorbs all colors except yellow, which is what we see.
Even though youv'e given it the name "Yellow", the object is only yellow when there's some yellow light shining on it. You see, it absorbs all other colors of light, and only yellow light bounces off of it. That's why the light from that object that enters your eye is yellow light, and that's why you describe the object as looking "yellow". If there's no yellow light shining on the object, it looks black.
A yellow object absorbs blue light and reflects yellow light. This is because yellow is the combination of red and green light, which are not absorbed by the object.
No. When referring an object, brown and yellow are adjectives.
An object appears yellow because it reflects wavelengths of light in the yellow part of the visible spectrum and absorbs other wavelengths. Our eyes perceive this reflected light as the color yellow.
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A yellow and see-through object could be a windowpane.
[object Object]
When shining a green object onto a yellow light, the green object would absorb most of the yellow light while reflecting the green wavelengths. This would make the green object appear even brighter and more vibrant due to the contrast created by the yellow light.
The object absorbs all colors except yellow in daylight, reflecting yellow light. When illuminated with magenta light, the object absorbs magenta light and reflects red light due to the mixing of magenta and yellow light together. This causes the object to appear red under magenta light.