It would look green...
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.
The object would be black, because red cannot reflect green light so no colour is reflected of the object.
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.
A green object will appear dark or black under blue light because it does not reflect blue light well. Green objects absorb blue light, resulting in little to no reflection of this color.
The yellow shirt would appear black because yellow absorbs green light, rather than reflecting it.
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.
The grass would appear black under orange lights because green objects appear black under light that does not include green wavelengths. Orange lights contain little to no green light, causing green objects like grass to absorb most of the light and appear as black.
A light green vicodin would look light green.
The object would be black, because red cannot reflect green light so no colour is reflected of the object.
i know mate and stop using this its bad
It is either green because the colour of light above it is the only colour it allows through like in this case Green light only lets green through or it could be cyan as blue and green make cyan but i think it would be green
A green object is called "green" because that's the only color of light that it reflects to our eyes, while it absorbs any other light. If there's no green light shining on it, then there's nothing for it to reflect, and we would describe it as a "black" object under those conditions.
Nothing would ever be green. The color would not exist.
Green.
Under a red light, a lime would appear dark and almost black, as red light does not provide the necessary spectrum to reflect the green color of the lime. The lime's surface would absorb most of the red light, resulting in a lack of color perception.
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.
When shining a green object onto a yellow light, the green object would absorb most of the yellow light while reflecting the green wavelengths. This would make the green object appear even brighter and more vibrant due to the contrast created by the yellow light.