Depending on the substance that comprises the object,
light may be reflected, absorbed, or transmitted.
Visible light interacts with an object by either being absorbed, transmitted, or reflected. The color of the object is determined by the wavelengths of light that are reflected off its surface. When light is absorbed, it can cause the object to heat up. Transmitted light passes through the object without being absorbed or reflected.
It is either transmitted or reflected. Often, different portions of the light do both.
The apparent color of the object.
A visible object that is not a light source is any other object in the universe. Objects that are not light sources reflect light and are thus made to be visible.Examples include:planetspeoplethe mooncarsdogsflowersbooksrocks, either in daylight, or else illuminated by a flashlighta light bulb or LED with the power switched off
Anything that absorbs all the visible light that strikes it appears totally black.
When white light strikes a black object, the object absorbs most of the light and reflects very little, which is why the object appears black. This is because black objects absorb most of the light across the visible spectrum.
When white light strikes a green opaque object, the object absorbs all colors of light except green. Green light is reflected off the object and that is what our eyes perceive as the color of the object.
When light strikes a heavy object, it can be absorbed, reflected, or transmitted. The specific outcome depends on the material composition and surface characteristics of the object. Some materials may absorb the light energy and convert it into heat, while others may reflect the light, making the object visible.
The light waves can be reflected, absorbed, they can pass the object or be refracted.,
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.
Depending on the object, it may be reflected, absorbed, refracted or internally reflected.
An opaque object transmits very little light, and therefore reflects, scatters, or absorbs most of it.
Basically three things can happen to light as it strikes an object. It can be reflected, absorbed, or it can pass through. For simplicity, assume the object is not transparent; in that case, any light that is not reflected is absorbed.
Visible light interacts with an object by either being absorbed, transmitted, or reflected. The color of the object is determined by the wavelengths of light that are reflected off its surface. When light is absorbed, it can cause the object to heat up. Transmitted light passes through the object without being absorbed or reflected.
When light strikes a black object, the object absorbs most of the light and reflects very little. This absorption of light is what gives black objects their characteristic dark appearance.
the black object absorbs most of the light. Theoretically nothing can be truly black because if it were truly black, we could not see it.
It is either transmitted or reflected. Often, different portions of the light do both.