Neon gas gives off an orange - red color when electricity is passed through it.
When an electric current is passed through xenon gas, it produces a bluish color. This is due to the excitation of the xenon atoms causing them to emit light in the blue part of the spectrum.
When chlorine gas is passed through a solution of potassium bromide, the solution will change from colorless to yellow. This indicates the formation of elemental bromine as a result of the reaction between chlorine and bromide ions.
When ethene is passed through bromine solution in carbon tetrachloride, the initially red-brown color of the bromine solution decolorizes due to the addition of bromine across the carbon-carbon double bond in ethene, forming a colorless 1,2-dibromoethane product.
When ethyne is passed through ammoniacal cuprous chloride solution, the blue color of the cuprous chloride solution fades as the ethyne reduces cuprous chloride to copper, forming reddish-brown copper. This reaction is a test for unsaturation in organic compounds.
Primary colours. Orange, purple and green are the three secondary colours. Any combination of those and/or primary colours after that are tertiary colours.I.E.red + yellow = orangered + blue = purpleblue + yellow = green
When electricity is passed through a gas, it causes the gas atoms or molecules to become excited and emit light at specific wavelengths. Each gas has a unique set of energy levels, so when electricity is passed through it, the emitted light will reveal the characteristic color associated with that specific gas.
Here is a website that will help you out with Helium as well as other gasses that emit colours when in a glass tube with electricity running through at the related link.
The closer to blue a color is, the more energy it has. The radiation emitted depends on the temperature of the object, assuming that it is a perfect "black body".
Dimmer
Conductivity describes how easily electricity travels through an object. Materials with high conductivity, like metals, allow electricity to pass through easily, while materials with low conductivity, like rubber, resist the flow of electricity. Temperature, color, and reflectivity do not directly impact how easily electricity travels through an object.
Xenon is generally colourless, however when electricity is passed, it gives out a lovely pale violet colour.
Neon gas emits a reddish-orange color when electricity runs through it due to the excitation of its electrons.
if the light passes through something that is coloured the light changes colour to the colour that it passed through
Well mice have genotypes just like we humans do. Therefore the same way that traits are passed through mice, they are passed through humans.
When an electric current is passed through xenon gas, it produces a bluish color. This is due to the excitation of the xenon atoms causing them to emit light in the blue part of the spectrum.
Neon is a colorless and odorless gas in its natural state. However, when electricity is passed through it, it emits a bright red-orange glow, which is the color we commonly associate with "neon lights".
Electricity doesn't have color. Your question can't be answered.