A mirror
Mirror.
Being a man of physics, I can say that it depends on what kind of object it is and the type of light beam or ray.
i think diffuse
Moonlight is almost entirely reflected sunlight, with very small amounts of reflected starlight and earthlight as well. As such, it radiates at the same continuous spectrum as the sun, though it won't have the bright emission lines that the sun emits.
That depends on the material, its colour and the light. If you hit something red with red light it almost reflects everything, if you hit it with blue light, it gets almost completly absorbed.
When the light reflects on an object into your eye you see the objects colour. When all of the light reflects into your eye you see the colour as white. So if some of the light is absorbed into the object you see it as it being a certain colour. There are cone cells in the eye that detect color (the other type of cells is rod cells, which are better at distinguishing light/darkness and patterns). Different colors of light excite different cone cells and cone cell clusters and these cells transmit signals to your brain, which interprets these signals as color vision.
Mirror.
White reflects all the colours/wavelengths of light. Oppositely black would absorb all light. Hence you don't see light from a black object, you recognize the contrast between it and its surroundings. Any colours would be a mixture of absorption and reflection. If an object is transparent it reflects no(or close to as little as possible) light. Just an explanation based on science classes. -Jess
Violet reflects the most light energy because it absorbs the most light energy. The amount of energy that is absorbed and captured by the pigment of shorter wavelengths is also used to do work or "energy".
Earth's surface don't give any light. It reflects the light from its surface.
Because it reflects from the sun, and acts like a satalight
spectral
Being a man of physics, I can say that it depends on what kind of object it is and the type of light beam or ray.
yes light has a effect on shapes. Object's colour tone depends on the type of light it absorbs and reflects. Blue objects look blue, because they reflect it and absorbs all other light that falls on it. Different colour will impart different appearance in terms of colour
mirror yes it might not seem like it but it is u will proboly understand when u get into microscopes
There are many objects that no light can pass through, although of course, it depends on what type of light you're talking about. The name of the type of object that visible light cannot pass through is called opaque.
light colored and smooth. these characteristics will allow the waves to reflect and bounce off rather than absorb.