A type of weak radiation thought to be present due to quantum effects near a black hole's event horizon is often called Hawking radiation, after the scientist who proposed it, Professor Stephen Hawking.
That would be black.
Black light is produced using ultraviolet (UV) lights. These lights emit UV radiation, which causes certain materials to glow or fluoresce in a way that appears to be black light. Other colors of light don't have the same effect on these materials, which is why they cannot produce black light.
Black as a color would absorb all visible frequencies of light. A "black light" is not actually black, but rather emits most of its light in the ultraviolet frequencies. This light is invisible to our eyes except that it interacts with certain materials that fluoresce (glow in the dark) when they absorb UV light. These lights are also used for indoor plants that need UV light to grow.
Light is affected by gravity, if the gravity is immense. In a black hole, the gravity is so immense that light cannot escape from it, hence it cannot be seen - whcih is why it's called a "black hole".
There is no such thing as black light. Black is the absence of light.The above statement is incorrect. The color Black when speaking of light, is the absence of light, but a black light is the term used for Invisible ultraviolet or infrared radiationA black light causes fluorescent materials to emit visible light and is used to take pictures in the dark of various substances.
Black is produced by the complete absorption of light rays. When an object absorbs all wavelengths of light and reflects none, our eyes perceive it as black.
Black isn't a light ray, its an absence of light. Red and green light assuming equal proportions makes yellow light
White light is the combination of all visible colours of light (this is why when you shine white light through a prism, you see a rainbow). Black, however, is not technically a colour. It is, in fact, the absence of light.
black
Yes. White is produced by the reflection of all colored light, and black is produced by the absorption of all colored light.
That would be black.
UV Ultraviolet
If Shadow is a horse, then no. Shadow may be white or brown. Else, if you are referring to a shadow produced by blocking out light with an object, then yes. When we do not see light, our view is in black. All other colours that we see are produced from light. Since shadows are created by excluding light from an object, we should only see black.
The process responsible for amplification of light after the first photon is produced is called stimulated emission. This process involves the emission of a second photon that has the same wavelength, phase, and direction as the original photon. This leads to a cascade effect where more photons are produced, resulting in amplification of light.
A rainbow is formed when sunlight is refracted and dispersed by water droplets in the atmosphere. The colors in a rainbow are produced by the visible light spectrum, which does not include black. Black is the absence of light, so it does not appear in a rainbow.
They are sometimes called "black lights".
Since black is the absence of color ... I believe that you're having a problem with definitions.