Orange
The yellow object will appear dark because it reflects yellow light, which is a combination of red and green light. Since only red light is being shone on it, the object will not reflect any light and will appear black.
It will look red. White light is made up of a spectrum of many colours. The primary colours are red, green and blue. An object (in white light) appears yellow because it reflects red and green light but absorbs blue light. In red light, the same object will simply reflect the red light. Since there is no green light, the object will appear red. (A mixture of red and green gives yellow)
In blue light, a yellow object would appear dark or black because yellow absorbs blue light and reflects other colors. This means that the object wouldn't reflect any of the blue light, making it appear dark.
Objects that appear blue absorb longer wavelengths of light and reflect shorter, blue wavelengths. This is due to the molecular structure of the object, which selectively absorbs and reflects light. In contrast, objects that appear yellow absorb shorter, blue wavelengths and reflect longer, yellow wavelengths, resulting in the perception of the color yellow.
A yellow object under a yellow light will appear very bright and vibrant, as the object will reflect the light in a consistent color. This can potentially make it difficult to differentiate between the object and the surrounding light source.
The yellow object will appear dark because it reflects yellow light, which is a combination of red and green light. Since only red light is being shone on it, the object will not reflect any light and will appear black.
It will look red. White light is made up of a spectrum of many colours. The primary colours are red, green and blue. An object (in white light) appears yellow because it reflects red and green light but absorbs blue light. In red light, the same object will simply reflect the red light. Since there is no green light, the object will appear red. (A mixture of red and green gives yellow)
In blue light, a yellow object would appear dark or black because yellow absorbs blue light and reflects other colors. This means that the object wouldn't reflect any of the blue light, making it appear dark.
Objects that appear blue absorb longer wavelengths of light and reflect shorter, blue wavelengths. This is due to the molecular structure of the object, which selectively absorbs and reflects light. In contrast, objects that appear yellow absorb shorter, blue wavelengths and reflect longer, yellow wavelengths, resulting in the perception of the color yellow.
A yellow object under a yellow light will appear very bright and vibrant, as the object will reflect the light in a consistent color. This can potentially make it difficult to differentiate between the object and the surrounding light source.
The object will appear to be blue. However, the object would be indistinguishable from an object that reflects all colors of light. If yellow light were shone on an object that reflects only blue wavelengths, the object would appear to be black.
It would look like a very, very, very, very yellowy orange.
Even though youv'e given it the name "Yellow", the object is only yellow when there's some yellow light shining on it. You see, it absorbs all other colors of light, and only yellow light bounces off of it. That's why the light from that object that enters your eye is yellow light, and that's why you describe the object as looking "yellow". If there's no yellow light shining on the object, it looks black.
A green object would appear dark or almost black under yellow light. This is because yellow light consists of wavelengths that are primarily in the yellow part of the spectrum, and it does not contain much green light. Therefore, the green object would not reflect much light back to our eyes, resulting in its dark appearance.
Colours appear the way they are because of light. Objects such as this bus reflect colours from light..thats why most things apear black in the dark because there is little or no light to reflect off of. Yellow objects reflect yellow while absorbing remaining colours
Objects that appear blue reflect shorter wavelengths of light, such as blue and violet, while absorbing longer wavelengths like red and orange. On the other hand, objects that appear yellow reflect longer wavelengths, such as yellow and red, and absorb shorter wavelengths like blue and violet. This difference in reflection is due to the specific properties of the object's surface and the colors of light it interacts with.
The object would appear black because it would not reflect any of the blue light shining on it, and blue light alone cannot activate any yellow pigments to reflect back a different color.