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Light passes thru, gets absorbed or is reflected dependent on the wavelength of light and the density of the plasma.
As light passes over it during the course of a day, an object sitting in a stable place changes its color. That's because color is a quality of light as it is reflected from the surface of the object and into the eye.
Because this light ray passes through without being bent.
Violet
when light passes through molecules of water it gets scattered in all direction and imparts color is called scatteing , for e.g .....blue color of the sky. when light passes through prism is called dispersion and will get a band of 7 color.
Light passes thru, gets absorbed or is reflected dependent on the wavelength of light and the density of the plasma.
The medium through which it passes
As light passes over it during the course of a day, an object sitting in a stable place changes its color. That's because color is a quality of light as it is reflected from the surface of the object and into the eye.
The light is reflected upwards, and passes through the specimen. It passes through easier (clearer) if the specimen is not too thick.
they reflected
Glass is transparent meaning light passes through it and therefore you can see through it, but some light reflects back and if the surface is very smooth as glass often is then the light reflected back can be seen as a reflected image.
It shows color.
if the light passes through something that is coloured the light changes colour to the colour that it passed through
Because this light ray passes through without being bent.
Violet
White light contains all colors. When white light passes through red glass, for example (or any red thing that passes light through it), all of the colors except red are removed (filtered out) so the resulting light only contains the color red. This is a big part of the reason why that piece of glass comes to be called "red" glass.
white.Edit: No, it's not white. If you think scientifically white is every color. If you consider this then wouldn't it be black?Edit: No, it's not black either; in physics the only color that has no color is a transparent one--because then light does not get reflected off it (it passes right through it), and so, no colors are actually visible.