A magenta shirt would reflect red and blue light waves, giving it a bright and vibrant appearance. The combination of these two primary colors results in the perception of magenta to the human eye.
Green would appear black or very dark under magenta light because magenta light contains no green wavelengths to reflect back. Therefore, without green light to reflect, green objects would not be visible and would appear dark or black.
It depends on the specific colors and whether they are tints or tones or pure hues. For instance Navy Blue is a cool color, but yellow (a warm color) reflects more light. But a dark red (warm color) would reflect less light than a light blue (cool). In color theory, using pure color hues (which don't actually exist in commercial products), Red, Blue, and Green would all reflect exactly the same amount of light, and Magenta, Cyan, and Yellow would all reflect exactly the same amount of light. But Magenta, Cyan, and yellow would each reflect exactly twice the light as Red, Blue, and Red.
A blue object would appear dark or almost black in magenta lights because magenta does not contain any blue light to reflect off the object, causing it to absorb most of the light.
A pure green object would reflect the green third of the spectrum, and absorb the red and blue portions. Magenta light is composed of red and blue waves so they would be absorbed by the green object. Therefore, in theory, a green object would appear neutral, virtually black. But this assumes that all the colors are very pure and perfectly balanced. This is unlikely, so the object would most likely look near neutral with some color skewing one way or another.
The visible red light has a wavelength of about 650 nm. At sunrise and sunset, red or orange colors are present because the wavelengths associated with these colors are less efficiently scattered by the atmosphere than the shorter wavelength colors (e.g., blue and purple). A large amount of blue and violet light has been removed as a result of scattering and the longwave colors, such as red and orange, are more readily seen.
Because it will absorb all the colors of the light spectrum but red, something like a white shirt would reflect all the colors making it absorb less, a black shirt would take in all the color making it the hottest to wear.
Green would appear black or very dark under magenta light because magenta light contains no green wavelengths to reflect back. Therefore, without green light to reflect, green objects would not be visible and would appear dark or black.
It depends on the specific colors and whether they are tints or tones or pure hues. For instance Navy Blue is a cool color, but yellow (a warm color) reflects more light. But a dark red (warm color) would reflect less light than a light blue (cool). In color theory, using pure color hues (which don't actually exist in commercial products), Red, Blue, and Green would all reflect exactly the same amount of light, and Magenta, Cyan, and Yellow would all reflect exactly the same amount of light. But Magenta, Cyan, and yellow would each reflect exactly twice the light as Red, Blue, and Red.
A blue object would appear dark or almost black in magenta lights because magenta does not contain any blue light to reflect off the object, causing it to absorb most of the light.
A pure green object would reflect the green third of the spectrum, and absorb the red and blue portions. Magenta light is composed of red and blue waves so they would be absorbed by the green object. Therefore, in theory, a green object would appear neutral, virtually black. But this assumes that all the colors are very pure and perfectly balanced. This is unlikely, so the object would most likely look near neutral with some color skewing one way or another.
I think the only way is to add water,I don't believe adding yellow would be the answerAnswerAdding yellow would turn cyan to green and magenta to red. My printer uses "light magenta" and "light cyan" inks which use different pigments than the full-strength magenta and cyan, maybe you could add some of those to your cartridge when you refill it.
Red and violet.
Under magenta light, red would appear darker and more muted due to the presence of magenta light wavelengths. The red may also appear more purple or pink depending on the intensity of the magenta light.
Colors reflect of a surface, and the other colors are absorbed, say it was a blue dress. All the other colors would be absorbed, and blue would reflect so you could see it.
Mercury is a merky colour. If you were to think of a paint palette you would mix flourescent magenta and muddy brown.
monkeys mean elephants and elephants mean cats so there basic color probably would be magenta
Green light is one of the additive primaries, meaning it's one of the three basic colors in light that make up all other colors. Magenta light is made up of the other two additive primaries, blue and red. Therefore if you balanced the two lights in the right proportions, you would in essence be combining all three additive primary colors, resulting in the full spectrum, or white light. Since it's very difficult to get perfectly balanced colors, your actual results would most likely be skewed one way or the other.