When you put an object in front of light, the object can either absorb, reflect, or transmit the light. If the object absorbs the light, it appears dark. If it reflects the light, it appears illuminated. If the object transmits the light, it may appear transparent or colored.
When you put a transparent object against the sun, the light goes through the object. Depending on the material and thickness of the object, it may refract or bend the light, casting a shadow or creating a prism effect.
The wood will block the beam of light, causing a shadow to form on the other side of the wood where light cannot pass through. The wood absorbs or scatters the light, depending on its thickness and density.
According to Blackbody radiation, the darker the object the more light it will absorb. A perfect example is a radiometer, in a light bulb container, there is a thin pin pointing upwards in the middle of the bulb. Then, a little tube with the pin through it has four surfaces. Each surface has a white side and a dark side. If you put something that radiates heat, then it will spin. Since, one side absorb more radiation then the other side, on side is more denser. As a result, it spins.
When you put a mirror in front of another mirror, it creates a series of reflections that appear to go on infinitely. This effect is called an infinite mirror effect.
To stop light from reaching its destination, you would need to block or obstruct the path that the light is traveling along. This can be done using objects that absorb, reflect, or refract light, creating a barrier that the light cannot pass through. Examples include opaque objects, walls, or materials with high opacity.
1) if the object is opeaque the will not pass through it 2) if the object is hard the light will bend and forming a shadow of that object 3) if the object is cold its temperature will become exact to the enviropment
An object such as a train simply CANNOT travel at the speed of light. You can investigate what happens when it moves close to the speed of light.
the light becomes red :-P
When you put a transparent object against the sun, the light goes through the object. Depending on the material and thickness of the object, it may refract or bend the light, casting a shadow or creating a prism effect.
light bounces off an object and on to the miorror surface where it is then reflected at the same wavelength as it was casted on to there with
opaque
Alot happens when you put a lense into a beam of light.
-- A paper weight on a piece of paper. -- A car on an ant
Nothing. The light gets blocked by the filters.
Well i put my face in front a movie projector and nothing happens its really bright though.
it doesn't let light through
try it