Absorbed
When white light strikes a green opaque object, the object absorbs all colors of light except green. Green light is reflected off the object and that is what our eyes perceive as the color of 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.
No, a red object looks red because it reflects red light while absorbing other colors. When white light containing all colors in the visible spectrum strikes the object, all colors are absorbed except for red, which is reflected off the object and perceived by our eyes as red.
Basically three things can happen to light as it strikes an object. It can be reflected, absorbed, or it can pass through. For simplicity, assume the object is not transparent; in that case, any light that is not reflected is absorbed.
A green object absorbs all colors of light except for green. When white light, which contains all colors of the visible spectrum, hits the object, the green pigment in the object absorbs all colors except green, which is reflected off the object. This reflected green light is what we perceive with our eyes, giving the object its green color.
Basically three things can happen to light as it strikes an object. It can be reflected, absorbed, or it can pass through. For simplicity, assume the object is not transparent; in that case, any light that is not reflected is absorbed.
When white light strikes a green opaque object, the object absorbs all colors of light except green. Green light is reflected off the object and that is what our eyes perceive as the color of 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.
sex
sex
No, a red object looks red because it reflects red light while absorbing other colors. When white light containing all colors in the visible spectrum strikes the object, all colors are absorbed except for red, which is reflected off the object and perceived by our eyes as red.
Basically three things can happen to light as it strikes an object. It can be reflected, absorbed, or it can pass through. For simplicity, assume the object is not transparent; in that case, any light that is not reflected is absorbed.
A green object absorbs all colors of light except for green. When white light, which contains all colors of the visible spectrum, hits the object, the green pigment in the object absorbs all colors except green, which is reflected off the object. This reflected green light is what we perceive with our eyes, giving the object its green color.
It absorbs all colors except red.
A blue object absorbs white light that contains all colors except blue. When white light shines on a blue object, the object appears blue because it reflects blue light and absorbs all other colors in the white light spectrum.
When an object appears blue, it is because it is absorbing all colors of light except for blue. Blue light is reflected off the object, which is why we see it as blue.
A red object reflects red light and absorbs other colors of light. When white light shines on a red object, all the colors of the spectrum are absorbed by the object except for red, which is reflected back to our eyes.