Blue appears black under a yellow light. For example if you have a blue car and you put a yellow light on it will appear black due to the absence of color. The light has nothing to reflect back.
Green-Yellow-Red-Green For color blind people the traffic light would be upright and from top it would be. Red Yellow Green.
Any object you can see reflects light. If it did not reflect any light it would be invisible. Similarly, no object is so reflective that it reflects all light. The proof that it absorbs light is that it increses in temperature as it is exposed to light.
It depends on the density of the object that weighs one pound, and how much of it is under water. The object will weight 1lb - water density * object volume under water; If the object is on average is less dense the water (i.e. is buoyant), and is allowed to swim, its weight will be 0 because proportion of its volume under water will compensate gravity exactly.
Luminous objects are the objects that responsible for our vision and omit their own light. Stars, radium, LED, and sparks are some of example of artificial luminous object.
The colour of an object is determined by the wavelengths of light it reflects. An object that is purley one wavelength (lets say a specific wavelength in the blue part of the spectrum) would be absorbing all visable wavelengths except that specific blue wavelength.
A green object would appear dark or almost black under yellow light. This is because yellow light consists of wavelengths that are primarily in the yellow part of the spectrum, and it does not contain much green light. Therefore, the green object would not reflect much light back to our eyes, resulting in its dark appearance.
It would look like a very, very, very, very yellowy orange.
Even though youv'e given it the name "Yellow", the object is only yellow when there's some yellow light shining on it. You see, it absorbs all other colors of light, and only yellow light bounces off of it. That's why the light from that object that enters your eye is yellow light, and that's why you describe the object as looking "yellow". If there's no yellow light shining on the object, it looks black.
When shining a green object onto a yellow light, the green object would absorb most of the yellow light while reflecting the green wavelengths. This would make the green object appear even brighter and more vibrant due to the contrast created by the yellow light.
white shoes appear white because it reflects all 7 colours of white light when fallen on to it.Therefore if only yellow light is fallen on to this object it would give out light rays which are yellow in colour . so shoes would appear yellow.
The yellow cloth would appear dark under cyan light, as cyan light absorbs yellow. It would appear brownish-gray under blue light, as blue light is the opposite of yellow on the color wheel and would cancel it out.
In blue light, a yellow object would appear dark or black because yellow absorbs blue light and reflects other colors. This means that the object wouldn't reflect any of the blue light, making it appear dark.
Banana would appear as a darker shade of yellow under a yellow light due to the way light interacts with its surface texture. The yellow light would enhance the yellow tones of the banana, making it appear richer and more vibrant.
Red - Yellow light is a mixture of red and green light. When a magenta filter is placed in front of it, the filter would allow the red light through, but not the green, making it appear red through the filter. Anyone who listens to 'Anonymous' over me will see I am right when they pick up a set of filters.
It's called "A Blue Object" because when light of many colors falls on it, it reflects the blue light toward your eyes and absorbs all the other colors, including yellow. So if yellow light is the only light falling on it, the light is all absorbed, none is reflected to your eyes, and the object appears black.
An object that reflects green and red light would be some shade of yellow or orange, depending on the proportions.
A lemon would appear green under green light because the object reflects the color of light that it does not absorb. In this case, a lemon's yellow color would absorb all other colors except green, which it would reflect.