differences in the color of light will change the color's appearance as it is seen under fluorescent and incandescent.
An incandescent lamp, like the sun, produces a spectrum of light in every color in a wide band, broad enough to cover the entire visible spectrum -- and extending past it to many colors that humans can't see.
A fluorescent lamp produces a spectrum of light in a few narrower bands of color. That is why a fluorescent lamp is more energy efficient than a incandescent -- the fluorescent lamp doesn't waste energy producing photons that humans can't see.
Some materials (such as white paper) reflect all visible colors equally. They look white in almost any kind of light.
Other materials absorb some colors more strongly than other colors. They look colored in "white" incandescent light.
If we have a material that reflects most colors equally, except for a narrow band of colors, and that band is in the "dark" part of of the fluorescent spectrum -- it will look the same color as white paper. If we have another material that reflects most colors equally, except for a narrow band of colors that is in one of the bands of colors produced by a flourescent lamp -- that material will look even more deeply colored in fluorescent light than in incandescent light.
It meas that the bulb uses 25 watts of electric power to run. Different types of bulb produce different amounts of light, with incandescent bulbs producing the least. A bigger proportion of the energy supplied to the compact fluorescent bulb is transferred to light and less wasted to the surroundings as heating.
The color of visible light depends on its wavelength. Different wavelengths of light appear as different colors to the human eye. Shorter wavelengths correspond to colors like blue and violet, while longer wavelengths correspond to colors like red and orange.
Light determines color by its wavelength, with different wavelengths corresponding to different colors in the visible spectrum. When light interacts with an object, certain wavelengths are absorbed and others are reflected or transmitted. The reflected or transmitted wavelengths determine the color that we perceive.
White light is a mixture of different colors. Different materials have different surface properties; as a result, one material may reflect a larger percentage of red light, and a smaller percentage of other colors, such as blue or green light - thus, it will appear red. Another material may reflect more green light than other colors, so it will appear more green.
All of them. We see by the colors that reflect back into our eyes or are absorbed by the object they're hitting
differences in the color of light will change the color's appearance as it is seen under fluorescent and incandescent. An incandescent lamp, like the sun, produces a spectrum of light in every color in a wide band, broad enough to cover the entire visible spectrum -- and extending past it to many colors that humans can't see. A fluorescent lamp produces a spectrum of light in a few narrower bands of color. That is why a fluorescent lamp is more energy efficient than a incandescent -- the fluorescent lamp doesn't waste energy producing photons that humans can't see. Some materials (such as white paper) reflect all visible colors equally. They look white in almost any kind of light. Other materials absorb some colors more strongly than other colors. They look colored in "white" incandescent light. If we have a material that reflects most colors equally, except for a narrow band of colors, and that band is in the "dark" part of of the fluorescent spectrum -- it will look the same color as white paper. If we have another material that reflects most colors equally, except for a narrow band of colors that is in one of the bands of colors produced by a flourescent lamp -- that material will look even more deeply colored in fluorescent light than in incandescent light.
A pattern of different colors of light coming from an object is known as a spectrum. This spectrum is produced when light interacts with the object and is separated into its different wavelengths, creating a range of colors.
Objects appear to be different colors when seen in different colors of light because they absorb and reflect light differently based on their material composition. When white light hits an object, it absorbs some colors and reflects others, giving the object its perceived color. If the light source changes, the mix of colors hitting the object changes, altering how it appears.
Different colors are the result of different wavelengths of light being reflected. When light strikes an object, certain wavelengths are absorbed while others are reflected, giving the object its color. The human eye perceives these reflected wavelengths as different colors.
No, a burner is not considered incandescent. Incandescent refers to light produced by a hot object, like an incandescent light bulb, not a heat source like a burner.
Colored objects absorb some colors of light and reflect others. When you shine a colored light on an object, the object will absorb the light colors it matches and reflect the colors that it does not. This interaction between the object's color and the light color leads to the object appearing to be a different color under different colored lights.
A prism is the object that separates white light into the colors of the rainbow through the process of refraction. The different colors of light have different wavelengths and are bent at varying angles as they pass through the prism, creating the spectrum of colors.
Light is emmited from within the object.
When an object is in sunlight, it reflects some of the light that hits it. The color we see is the result of the reflected light waves. Different colors are absorbed by the object, and the color we see is the light waves that are reflected back to our eyes.
The answer is a blue-green colour.
White light is a mixture of different colors. A red object (for example) would reflect a greater percentage of red light, and a lesser percentage of other colors, thus making the light that you see redder.
No, the colors you see are the colors that are reflected by the object. White light is composed of several different wavelengths of energy, these different energies correspond to different visible colors. When an object absorbs the light, it absorbs its energy, the rest of the energy is reflected from the surface. That energy is what you see in the form of photons (light). So, if an object looks blue to you, that object is absorbing red light.