A green shirt appears green because it reflects green light wavelengths while absorbing other colors. Materials on the shirt's surface interact with incoming light, absorbing some wavelengths and reflecting others, with green being the predominant reflected color in this case.
The shirt appears green because it absorbs red and blue light wavelengths, while reflecting the green wavelengths back to our eyes. Our eyes perceive the reflected green light and interpret it as the color green, even though the shirt is being illuminated by red, blue, and green light simultaneously. This phenomenon is due to the way colors are absorbed and reflected by the fabric of the shirt.
It absorbs all other wavelengths of visible light.
A yellow leaf can be considered green if it is viewed under a yellow light source, such as a yellow-filtered artificial light or the warm glow of the sun at sunset. The yellow light can give the leaf a green appearance due to a phenomenon called metamerism, where the spectral composition of the light source affects how colors are perceived.
black
If you mix green light and blue light, you get turqoise (a greenish-blueish color) light. Hope this helped! -ID6784
kind of brownish
A green t-shirt will appear darker and less vibrant under a red light due to the way the human eye perceives color. The red light will make the green shirt appear more subdued as the red light will reflect off the green fabric and alter its appearance.
The shirt appears green because it absorbs red and blue light wavelengths, while reflecting the green wavelengths back to our eyes. Our eyes perceive the reflected green light and interpret it as the color green, even though the shirt is being illuminated by red, blue, and green light simultaneously. This phenomenon is due to the way colors are absorbed and reflected by the fabric of the shirt.
The yellow shirt would appear black because yellow absorbs green light, rather than reflecting it.
A green t-shirt absorbs all colors in white light except for green. Green is reflected off the shirt, which is why we perceive it as green.
A white shirt will appear green under a green disco light because objects reflect the light projected onto them. Since the shirt is white, it will reflect the green light predominantly, giving it a green appearance.
White light is made up of three colours; red, green and blue. If the shirt appears blue, then the shirt has absorbed any other colours (green and red) and reflected the blue, making the shirt appear blue. I hope this has helped :)
The reason the shirt appears red in white light is because it is absorbing all other colours apart from red which it is reflecting into your eyes. When in a green light there is no red component of the light to be reflected so the shirt absorbs all the available light which makes it appear black.
White Light is made of all the colours of the spectrum (rainbow). If we look at something, say, green (like grass) it looks green to us because the chlorophyll in the leaves absorbs all the sunlight that lands on it with the exception of green light which it reflects. Therefore this green light that reflects into our eyes makes us see the grass as green. White objects, however, absorb no light and reflect all the colours back to us. As all the colours together make white light, we see the object (in your case, a T shirt) as white.
A green t-shirt reflects green light while absorbing all other colors in white light. This selective reflection by the fabric is what gives the t-shirt its green color appearance to our eyes.
Black
In a green disco light, your white shirt will likely appear to have a greenish tint. This is because the white fabric will reflect and scatter the green light wavelengths, which can cause the shirt to take on a green hue. The perceived color of an object is determined by the wavelengths of light it reflects, so in this case, the green light will dominate the appearance of the shirt.