When you shine a green light on a green object, the object will reflect the green light and appear brighter or more vivid in color. Green objects absorb most of the other colors of light and reflect green light, so they will be most visibly affected by green light.
If an object is white in sunlight it will be green in green light. A white object reflects all wavelengths (colors) of light that shine on it. If only green light shines on it, that color will be reflected and the object will look green.
When green and red light shine on a green leaf, the green light is mostly absorbed by chlorophyll for photosynthesis. The red light is less efficiently absorbed, so some is reflected back, leading to the leaf appearing green to our eyes.
When green light shines on a green leaf, the leaf absorbs most of the green light and reflects some of it, giving the leaf its green color. Red light is not absorbed as efficiently by the leaf, so it gets reflected, making the leaf appear green under white light.
The green light would be reflected, but the red light would be absorbed. ---Ryan Wang---
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.
If an object is white in sunlight it will be green in green light. A white object reflects all wavelengths (colors) of light that shine on it. If only green light shines on it, that color will be reflected and the object will look green.
When you shine yellow light onto a green surface, the surface will absorb the yellow light and reflect green light. This is because the surface appears green due to its ability to reflect green light while absorbing other colors.
When green and red light shine on a green leaf, the green light is mostly absorbed by chlorophyll for photosynthesis. The red light is less efficiently absorbed, so some is reflected back, leading to the leaf appearing green to our eyes.
To make green appear black, shine red light on it. Green absorbs red light, so when red light is shone on green, the green will appear black.
When green light shines on a green leaf, the leaf absorbs most of the green light and reflects some of it, giving the leaf its green color. Red light is not absorbed as efficiently by the leaf, so it gets reflected, making the leaf appear green under white light.
The green light would be reflected, but the red light would be absorbed. ---Ryan Wang---
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.
When you mix red and blue, you get magenta. When you shine a green light on magenta, the green light will be absorbed by the magenta, resulting in a dark color or black, depending on the intensity of the green light.
black since the object is blue, it reflects only blue light thus, shining red and green lights on it will only cause the object to absorb the two colors and it will result to the appearance of the object as black
BlackAll of the colours that make the white light shine down on the black object and all of the colours that make the white light the light absorbs into the object and no light reflects.WhiteAll of the colours that make the white light shine down on the white object and the light and no light is absorbed into the object but all of the colours that make the white light are reflected into your eyes
it reflects
If you shine a green light on a red cap, the cap will likely appear dark or black because red objects absorb green light and do not reflect it back to our eyes. This is due to the color mixing phenomenon where red and green cancel each other out.