the white light is made up of the rainbow colours (roygbiv) which red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo and violet. these colours you can easily remember by the word roygbiv.
Reflection: light bounces off of a surface, like a mirror.Refraction: light goes through a substance and bends. For example, white light through a prism comes out in a rainbow because the light is refracted or bent and each color has a different index of refraction.
Color derives from the spectrum of light (distribution of light power versus wavelength) interacting in the eye with the spectral sensitivities of the light receptors. Color categories and physical specifications of color are also associated with objects or materials based on their physical properties such as light absorption, reflection, or emission spectra.
Color is a physical property of an object that arises from the reflection of light off its surface. It is not a chemical reaction, but rather how our eyes perceive different wavelengths of light interacting with the molecules in the object.
The apparent color of the object.
Luster is not a color, but a visible characteristic of the mineral's reflection of light off it's surface. In this case, the color of biotite is dark brown to black, but it's luster would be described as vitreous or glassy.
No, the color of a mirror does not affect it's reflection of light.
The color of a mirror is typically silver or gray. The mirror's color does not affect the reflection of light because mirrors reflect light by bouncing it off their smooth surface, regardless of their color.
the color stays the same
light
Color affects reflection by determining what wavelengths of light are absorbed and which are reflected. The color of an object is determined by the wavelengths of light that its surface reflects. Different colors reflect different wavelengths of light, resulting in the perceived color of the object.
What an object is made of and the color light strikes it determine the object's visible color. The object's material composition affects how it interacts with light, leading to the absorption and reflection of certain colors. When light strikes an object, the object absorbs some wavelengths of light and reflects others, which our eyes perceive as color.
When light is reflected off a mirror, the frequency of the light does not change because reflection is a process that does not alter the properties of the light wave. The frequency of light corresponds to its color, and when we see our reflection in a mirror, we observe the same color that was emitted towards the mirror.
Sky is red in color because of reflection of the red light by the denser layers of the gases in the evenings. The other reason for this is the reflection of the red light by pollutant gases.
The color of an object is the frequency/wavelength of the light it reflects. The light it reflects is the light it receives minus the light it absorbs.
Red
No, blue color does not absorb light; instead, it reflects blue wavelengths of light and absorbs other colors. This reflection of blue light is what gives objects their blue color.
Technically white. Color is from wavelengths of light being reflected, and white is a reflection of all wavelengths