Anything perfectly black appears black because it absorbs all the colors of the visible spectrum instead of reflecting them like white paper, so the light energy is absorbed and transfered into heat energy (the paper warms up very slightly).
When a green light is shone onto cyan paper, the paper will absorb some of the green light and reflect the rest. Since cyan is a combination of green and blue, the green light will combine with the reflected blue light from the paper, making it appear brighter and more vibrant.
Black, because the blue light would be absorbed into the object's pigment and as there is no green light to reflect, the object would appear black.
When blue light is shone on a white surface, the surface reflects the blue light while absorbing other colors present in the light spectrum. This selective reflection results in the perception of the white color.
A cyan object will appear black when only magenta light is shone on it. Cyan objects absorb magenta light, so no light is being reflected back to our eyes, causing the object to appear black.
The green object will appear black because it will not reflect any of the blue light shone on it. Green objects primarily absorb blue light, so without any green or red light present, the object will appear dark.
the answer is that i dont know you fool
Your mother.
I don't know
When a green light is shone onto cyan paper, the paper will absorb some of the green light and reflect the rest. Since cyan is a combination of green and blue, the green light will combine with the reflected blue light from the paper, making it appear brighter and more vibrant.
the answer is that i dont know you fool
It looks red.
It travels to the magical land of the fairies
BLACK
shone is the past tense of shine.The light shines in my window.The light shone on my bed.
Black, because the blue light would be absorbed into the object's pigment and as there is no green light to reflect, the object would appear black.
When blue light is shone on a white surface, the surface reflects the blue light while absorbing other colors present in the light spectrum. This selective reflection results in the perception of the white color.
A cyan object will appear black when only magenta light is shone on it. Cyan objects absorb magenta light, so no light is being reflected back to our eyes, causing the object to appear black.