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In terms of the light colour spectrum, yes. Red and green light mixed will produce a yellow light. Red and green paint however will create either brown or black.
Leaves are green because green is the color they reflect, or reject. If you exposed a green plant to only green light, it would perish. Yellow is close to green and it's likely that an all-yellow light would not allow green plants to thrive. This question practically calls out for a science experiment now that monochrome (one color) fluorescent lights are available.
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Under a red spotlight, his jacket will not show up because it is red. His white shirt will appear red and his green trousers will appear black. This is because The red jacket is the same color as the light. His white shirt will turn red, since white reflects all colors, and since red is the only color, the white shirt reflects that color. His green trousers will appear black because there is no green that reflects off his trousers.
Something takes light in e.g. black trousers
Bromine
While the ball would still be green it will appear black. Anything green absorbed all colours except green. The green light is reflected to your eyes which makes it look green. Thus in red light (with no green in it) the red will be absorbed and no green light can be reflected to your eyes so the ball will look black.
Green light - Green, White light - Green, Red light - Black
Chlorophyll is green and nothing will ever change that
It turns black or dark in colour when silver nitrate is exposed to sunlight.
Her favorite color was BLACK!
They turn black
The cap is called 'green' because it absorbs all other colors of light, leaving only the green light to bounce from it to your eyes. If no green light shines on it, then there's no light to bounce from it to your eyes, and it appears black. If you only shine blue light on it, then there's no green light shining on it.
Yes, but it is not nesicarally green rock that glows under black light. Some rock are florescent and glow (under black light). Most of these rocks appear green, but not nesicarally all of them.