Yes
If a rug absorbs all rays except blue, it will appear blue because it reflects that specific wavelength of light while absorbing others. This selective reflection of blue light is what our eyes perceive as the color of the rug. Thus, the rug's color is determined by the wavelengths it reflects rather than absorbs.
yes also blue light rays
Chlorophyll mainly absorbs blue and red wavelengths of sunlight for photosynthesis. These wavelengths are most efficient for driving the process of photosynthesis in plants. Green wavelengths are not absorbed well by chlorophyll, which is why plants appear green.
A black object absorbs light rays by converting them into heat energy rather than reflecting or transmitting them. These objects appear black because they absorb most of the visible light spectrum.
No, it doesn't. It only absorbs UV rays.
Ozone in the atmosphere absorbs UV rays.
Ozone absorbs the UV rays. These are high energy radiations.
Chlorophyll is a green pigment found in cyanobacteria and chloroplasts of algae and plants which is an important biochemical for photosynthesis. It appears green because it is a poor absorber of green and near-green portions of the spectrum.
becasue that is how our eyes fromat it, the sea is blue because it is and land in gernrally known as green from the greek story books! he earth is blue and green because the seven rays of light emitted from the sun are passed through the atmosphere, these seven rays of light contain: Red Orange Yellow Green Blue Indigo Violet When these rays of light hit an object, it absorbs a certain colour of light, or multiple, and when it absorbs this/these colour(s) your eyes format that colour and basically you see that the grass is green because the grass has absorbed the green light, and that the sea is blue, because it absorbs the blue light. This light reflects off these objects and into your eyes.
Ozone gas in earth's atmosphere absorbs UV rays. It does not absorb infrared rays.
The phenomenon is called Rayleigh scattering. White light from the Sun is scattered going through the atmosphere. The Sun's rays coming pretty much straight down aren't scattered much, but rays going sideways through the atmosphere - the sunrise and sunset rays - are scattered. Red light is scattered least, so those sunset rays make it through to make the sky appear red, while blue rays are scattered more. The blue light rays are scattered toward the ground, and this makes the sky appear blue.
The atmosphere absorbs X rays.