...reflected off of it.
For example, leaves appear green as their pigment (chlorophyll) only reflects the wavelength of green light.
transparent objects are transparent because your eyes tells you so. In reality, every body sees every colour differently as our eye cells are not the same. So, in answer to the question, yes, but you cannot see it.
Yes the moon is translucent.....notice how the "craters adopt the same color as the sky....in day time the are blueish and at night they are a darker like the night sky....also there has been many people who have seen planets and stars throw the moon as it goes through its phases....do your research!!
An object (Materials) that does not allows anylight to pass through will form a shaddow:Eg.- Opaque ( Can't let any light to pass through)- Translucent (Allows a little bit of light to pass through)If you want to make sure Im correct do this experiment:Instruments:- A Cloth ( Opaque)- A torch- A Tracing paper ( Translucent)- A screenPlaces to do:- A dark roomHow to do? :- Use your torch and shone on the cloth facing on the screen, what will you see?- Use your torch and shone on the tracing paper on the screen, what will you see?You will see an unclear shadow and a clear shdow on the screen! You may also add one more item a Transparent object! You will see I'm quite correct...Shadows are formed by light, because if light shines onto an object, and the object blocks the light, the light will go sideways of the object, and therefore, a shadow is formed.Light can only travel in straight lines. If light is coming from one main source, then an object that does not allow light to pass through it, will have an absence of light behind it, i.e.a shadow.
some part of light reflected from the chair enters our eyes
No, such a transparent metal is not possible. Metals are a conductor of electricity. As a result of this, electromagnetic waves of the wavelength of light cannot penetrate it.
When the color of an object is the same as the color of the light shining on it, the object will appear brightest and most vibrant. This is because the object is absorbing all other colors of light and reflecting only the color that matches its own.
No. If the object absorbs that color, then there's none left to travelfrom there to your eyes, is there !The color you see is the light that the object couldn'tabsorb, so itbounced from the object to your eyes.
A green object under green light would appear its original color and shade of green. When an object is illuminated by light of the same color, no new colors are absorbed or reflected, resulting in the object appearing unchanged.
When light of a particular color hits an object, the object absorbs some of the light's colors and reflects others. If the object is absorbing the incoming light color, it will appear to "disappear" because it is not reflecting that specific color back to our eyes. This phenomenon is known as selective absorption or subtractive color mixing.
When colored objects are placed in colored light, the appearance changes due to the interaction of the object’s color and the light's color. If the colored object and the light are the same color, the object appears more vibrant. If the object and light are complementary colors, the object may appear dull or greyish due to color subtraction. It’s how the colors interact and mix that determines the final appearance of the colored object in colored light.
transparent objects are transparent because your eyes tells you so. In reality, every body sees every colour differently as our eye cells are not the same. So, in answer to the question, yes, but you cannot see it.
With ur eyes : Well, yes, but.. Ok, to be a little more specific, you see opaque objects the same way you see any other object. Photons of light reflect off of the object in question, back to your retinas in the back of your eyes. They then activate the optic nerves using rod and cone cells to interpret black and white and color as well as the details of the object. These impulses then travel through the optic nerves to the optic lobe of your brain, which is located in the back of the brain. Neurotransmitters in the brain cells then give you an instant interpretation of what you are seeing in your conscious brain.
Yes the moon is translucent.....notice how the "craters adopt the same color as the sky....in day time the are blueish and at night they are a darker like the night sky....also there has been many people who have seen planets and stars throw the moon as it goes through its phases....do your research!!
Infrared light can be blocked by the same opaque material that can block any other color light. Just because we can't see it doesn't give it any special penetrating powers.
You cant see through opaque things, but you can see through transparent things.
Everything obsorbs or bounces light off of itself. There are also many wavelengths and different types of light around us. This blue object obsorbs each and every color except the blue you are seeing. The blue light reflects off of the object, thus making it appear blue to your eyes.
An object (Materials) that does not allows anylight to pass through will form a shaddow:Eg.- Opaque ( Can't let any light to pass through)- Translucent (Allows a little bit of light to pass through)If you want to make sure Im correct do this experiment:Instruments:- A Cloth ( Opaque)- A torch- A Tracing paper ( Translucent)- A screenPlaces to do:- A dark roomHow to do? :- Use your torch and shone on the cloth facing on the screen, what will you see?- Use your torch and shone on the tracing paper on the screen, what will you see?You will see an unclear shadow and a clear shdow on the screen! You may also add one more item a Transparent object! You will see I'm quite correct...Shadows are formed by light, because if light shines onto an object, and the object blocks the light, the light will go sideways of the object, and therefore, a shadow is formed.Light can only travel in straight lines. If light is coming from one main source, then an object that does not allow light to pass through it, will have an absence of light behind it, i.e.a shadow.