When radiant heat falls on a body, it can be absorbed, reflected, or transmitted through the body. The absorption of radiant heat by a body depends on factors such as the material's surface properties, color, texture, and temperature. Materials with dark colors and matte surfaces tend to absorb more radiant heat compared to light-colored and shiny surfaces.
The way a body reacts to incident radiation depends upon the absorptive, reflectivity and transitivity. These are functions of the type of material and its color. For example black color metal would reflect more radiation than a black coloured plastic.
Radiant energy in the range of 400 to 800 tera hz, the optical range of light.
When light falls on matter, it can be absorbed, reflected, or transmitted. Absorption occurs when the light energy is taken in by the matter and converted into heat. Reflection occurs when the light bounces off the surface of the matter. Transmission occurs when the light passes through the matter without being absorbed or reflected.
When light falls on a black surface, it gets absorbed rather than reflected or transmitted. This absorption occurs because the black surface does not reflect any of the light that hits it, converting the light energy into heat energy instead. This is why black surfaces appear dark, as they do not appear to reflect any light back to the observer.
When light falls on a material with a natural frequency equal to its own, resonance occurs. This causes an increase in the amplitude of the vibrations in the material, resulting in the absorption of more energy. As a result, the material may heat up or other effects may be observed, depending on the specific properties of the material.
The way a body reacts to incident radiation depends upon the absorptive, reflectivity and transitivity. These are functions of the type of material and its color. For example black color metal would reflect more radiation than a black coloured plastic.
Absorption spectrum is a gap in the overall spectrum. It happen when light makes an electron jump to a higher orbital and light energy is absorbed. Emission spectrum is light emitted at particular wavelengths (where the absorption spectrum gaps are). It happens when an electron falls from a higher orbital and emits light energy in doing so.
Radiant energy in the range of 400 to 800 tera hz, the optical range of light.
when an object falls is it reactin to the force of gravity?
That would depend on where you started from.
When light falls on matter, it can be absorbed, reflected, or transmitted. Absorption occurs when the light energy is taken in by the matter and converted into heat. Reflection occurs when the light bounces off the surface of the matter. Transmission occurs when the light passes through the matter without being absorbed or reflected.
It falls and break
It falls, accelerating constantly until it hits the ground.
The Sun's output, and the absorption by the Earth's atmosphere.
it falls in 89
It stays there. Actually, it just falls forever.
Blood volume also falls.