refelcts
Yes. The apparent colour of a star is related to the peak wavelength of the light it emits. According to Wien's displacement law (look it up in Wikipedia) the peak wavelength is inversely proportional to the temperature. The higher the temperature, the shorter the peak wavelength. Wavelength decreases as one moves from red to blue in the visible spectrum, so a red star is cooler than a blue one.
Red has the highest wavelength among the visible colors.
It's not that a particular color has the longest wavelength. The wavelength BECOMES longer when a star moves away from us. Red light has a longer wavelength than blue, for example.
Red light has the longest wavelength in the visible light spectrum.
The longest visible wavelengths are red,
...because the colour of an object depends on the wavelength of light it reflects, or the wavelength of light it emits.
The frequency or wavelength of the light reflected from the object to your eye.
The color of an object is influenced by two main factors: the wavelength of light that is reflected or absorbed by the object, and the composition of the object's surface that determines which wavelengths are absorbed and which are reflected.
the wave length of light that is absorbed by the object determines color--White refects all eye perceptible colors where as black absorbes The colour of an opaque object is determined by the wavelength of the visible spectrum that it reflects. Light is made up of 7 colours, each having a specific wavelength range. Consider an object which appears green to the eye. Actually the object is not green in colour, it only reflects the waves pertaining to green wavelength range. All other wavelength are either transmitted or absorbed. The reflected wave reaches our retina and is perceived as that colour.
According to (longest wavelength) ROYGBIV (shortest wavelength), it would be "indigo."
The color of an opaque object is determined by the wavelengths of light that are absorbed by the object's surface. The color we perceive is a result of the wavelengths that are reflected back to our eyes. Objects appear a certain color because they reflect that color and absorb the rest of the colors in the visible spectrum.
In visible light, color is an indication of the wavelength of light that is being reflected or emitted by an object. Different colors correspond to different wavelengths of light, with red having the longest wavelength and violet having the shortest.
The colour of the object we see is due to the light which it reflects. the difference in colours are due to the difference in wavelength and frequency of the light wave.
the wave length of light that is absorbed by the object determines color--White refects all eye perceptible colors where as black absorbes The colour of an opaque object is determined by the wavelength of the visible spectrum that it reflects. Light is made up of 7 colours, each having a specific wavelength range. Consider an object which appears green to the eye. Actually the object is not green in colour, it only reflects the waves pertaining to green wavelength range. All other wavelength are either transmitted or absorbed. The reflected wave reaches our retina and is perceived as that colour.
The color of an object is the frequency/wavelength of the light it reflects. The light it reflects is the light it receives minus the light it absorbs.
The color yellow is created when light at a certain wavelength is reflected off an object and enters our eyes. Objects appear yellow when they reflect light in the wavelength range of approximately 570-590 nanometers. This specific wavelength range triggers the perception of yellow in our brains.
546nm light wavelength corresponds to a green color.