Refracted
Yes, light energy can be reflected by an object into your eyes. When light strikes an object, it can bounce off the surface in different directions. Some of this reflected light may enter your eyes, allowing you to see the object.
What an object is made of and the color light strikes it determine the object's visible color. The object's material composition affects how it interacts with light, leading to the absorption and reflection of certain colors. When light strikes an object, the object absorbs some wavelengths of light and reflects others, which our eyes perceive as color.
When light strikes an opaque object, the light is either absorbed, transmitted, or reflected. The object appears to be a certain color because it reflects certain wavelengths of light and absorbs the rest.
Yes, when light strikes an object, it can either be reflected (bounced off) or absorbed (taken in by the object). The amount of light that is reflected or absorbed depends on the properties of the object, such as its color and material.
Opaque objects do not allow light to pass through them, so they reflect or absorb light rays instead. When light strikes an opaque object, it scatters in different directions, some of which enter our eyes, allowing us to see the object.
Many photons are absorbed but some get reflected in various directions.
Yes, light energy can be reflected by an object into your eyes. When light strikes an object, it can bounce off the surface in different directions. Some of this reflected light may enter your eyes, allowing you to see the object.
When light strikes a rough surface it reflects in essentially random directions.
What an object is made of and the color light strikes it determine the object's visible color. The object's material composition affects how it interacts with light, leading to the absorption and reflection of certain colors. When light strikes an object, the object absorbs some wavelengths of light and reflects others, which our eyes perceive as color.
When light strikes an opaque object, the light is either absorbed, transmitted, or reflected. The object appears to be a certain color because it reflects certain wavelengths of light and absorbs the rest.
Yes, when light strikes an object, it can either be reflected (bounced off) or absorbed (taken in by the object). The amount of light that is reflected or absorbed depends on the properties of the object, such as its color and material.
Opaque objects do not allow light to pass through them, so they reflect or absorb light rays instead. When light strikes an opaque object, it scatters in different directions, some of which enter our eyes, allowing us to see the object.
When light strikes rough objects, it gets scattered in multiple directions due to the uneven surface. This causes the reflected light to be diffused rather than reflecting in a singular direction like with a smooth surface. As a result, the rough object appears matte or non-shiny compared to a smooth object.
the atom of the object will gain kinetic energy from the light
The light waves can be reflected, absorbed, they can pass the object or be refracted.,
The black object absorbs most of the light energy and converts it into heat, which is why black objects feel warmer in sunlight. The object also reflects some light, but because it absorbs most of the light across all visible wavelengths, it appears black to our eyes.
When light strikes an object, it can be absorbed by the object, converting into other forms of energy, or it can be reflected off the object's surface, allowing us to see the object if the reflected light reaches our eyes.