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The light the object reflects.
angle at which visible light is reflected off the object.
The color of an object are defined by the wavelengths of visible light that the object reflects. This reflected light is picked up by our eyes and interpreted as color. The other wavelengths of light are absored.
An object would appear black if:it did not emit any visible radiation.it was in an environment where there was no ambient visible radiation present.the compounds on its surface absorbed all radiation comprising the visible spectrum.
An object looks black whenever it absorbs all 7 colors of the visible spectrum. We can only see it with a color if that color is being reflected from it. Because the object absorbs all colors, it reflects none of them, so we do not see any color, and therefore we see the object as black.
The light the object reflects.
The light the object reflects.
The statement "All red objects have color" can be expressed as " If an object is red, it has a color. The contrapositive is "If an object does not have color, then it is not red."
When it is not in front of an object that has no color.
angle at which visible light is reflected off the object.
The color of an object are defined by the wavelengths of visible light that the object reflects. This reflected light is picked up by our eyes and interpreted as color. The other wavelengths of light are absored.
The Answer is color. Because color has to do with light and physical properties.
An object would appear black if:it did not emit any visible radiation.it was in an environment where there was no ambient visible radiation present.the compounds on its surface absorbed all radiation comprising the visible spectrum.
Everything we see is reflected being we see a color but the object we see is actually every color but the one we see, being one color is reflected no matter what it be between 3500>6500 Angstrom meters being the visible spectrum, this is also the object of chromotography.
Yes. The colour of an object is determined by what frequenc(y/ies) of electromagnetic wave it emits in the visible spectrum. The colour of an object is a physical property of that object.
The color that we see is not the color of the object in question, but the color of the light it reflects. This means that a "green object" absorbs all colors of the visible spectrum except for green light, which it reflects back to our eyes. White light is the combination of the entire visible spectrum combined. Thus a "white object" reflects all colors of light. On the opposite side of this question, a "black object" absorbs all colors of light, because "black" is the absence of color.
If it reflects that color of light, you're eyes will see that color being reflected by the object (when the color is being shown on the object, white light contains 'all' colors of visible light). If an object absorbs a color of light you will tend not to see it coming off of the object. Translation: objects will appear the color(s) of light that it reflects. If an object appears red, it reflects red light.