red stimulates passioin,confidence,and increases circultion
blue relaxes, soothes, slows down heart rate
The conclusion does not logically follow from the premises. Just because your car is not red, it does not necessarily mean that your shirt is also not blue. The color of your car and shirt are independent of each other.
Red light is hotter than blue light. This is because red light has a longer wavelength and lower frequency compared to blue light, meaning it carries less energy. Temperature is related to the average kinetic energy of particles in a substance, and red light has less energy to transfer compared to blue light.
The red book on the table is considered hotter.
When a blue shirt is in red light only, it may appear very dark or nearly black because the red light does not contain the wavelengths needed to reflect the blue color of the shirt. Instead, the shirt will absorb most of the red light, causing it to appear dark.
White light is made up of three colours; red, green and blue. If the shirt appears blue, then the shirt has absorbed any other colours (green and red) and reflected the blue, making the shirt appear blue. I hope this has helped :)
blue stars are hotter
The sun is hotter than red stars but cooler than blue stars,
White Dwarves and Blue giants are both hotter than Red giant stars.
False. Blue giants(or hypergiants) are hotter than Red giant stars. White dwarves are also hotter but they are smaller than blue giants. (As is implied by the name.)
Its colour. White stars are hotter than blue stars which are hotter than yellow which are hotter than orange, which are hotter than red.
The color of a star is influenced by its temperature, with blue stars being hotter than red stars. Therefore, you could conclude that the blue star is hotter than the red star. Additionally, blue stars typically have shorter lifespans than red stars.
yes
The blue star is the hottest.
Yes it is
No, blue stars are hotter than red stars. In other words, red stars are cooler. Think of it as fire. The red one is hot, but the blue flame is RAGING hot.
If the containers are the same apart from the colour, no. But if the red container is more insulated than the blue one, yes If the blue is more insulated than the red, no.
It's because of the temperature of the star. The temperature defines the colour of the star. A red star is cooler than a blue one. Imagine heating an iron rod. It will start off black, then red, then orange, then yellow and if you continue heating it, it will turn white. If you could heat it a lot more it would turn blue.