All the colors that are NOT absorbed by the object.
When looking at an opaque object, you see the colors that are reflected off its surface. The color perceived depends on the wavelengths of light that are reflected by the object. The colors visible to you are the ones that are not absorbed by the object's surface.
This applies not only to opaque objects. The basic idea is that white light is a mixture of different colors, and objects tend to reflect the different colors - the components of white light - in different proportions. For example, an object that reflects most of the red light but not much of the other colors will look red.
The color you see when looking at an opaque object is determined by the wavelengths of light that are reflected off the object's surface and into your eyes. The object absorbs some wavelengths and reflects others, which your eyes perceive as color. Different colors are the result of different combinations of reflected wavelengths.
White light is made up of all the colours of the rainbow. When light hits an object, some colours (wavelengths) are absorbed, and some reflected. The colour you see is a combination of all the reflected colours.
White
When looking at an opaque object, you see the colors that are reflected off its surface. The color perceived depends on the wavelengths of light that are reflected by the object. The colors visible to you are the ones that are not absorbed by the object's surface.
This applies not only to opaque objects. The basic idea is that white light is a mixture of different colors, and objects tend to reflect the different colors - the components of white light - in different proportions. For example, an object that reflects most of the red light but not much of the other colors will look red.
The color you see when looking at an opaque object is determined by the wavelengths of light that are reflected off the object's surface and into your eyes. The object absorbs some wavelengths and reflects others, which your eyes perceive as color. Different colors are the result of different combinations of reflected wavelengths.
White light is made up of all the colours of the rainbow. When light hits an object, some colours (wavelengths) are absorbed, and some reflected. The colour you see is a combination of all the reflected colours.
White
It depends on which frequencies are reflected off the object.
Colored objects absorb some colors of light and reflect others. When you shine a colored light on an object, the object will absorb the light colors it matches and reflect the colors that it does not. This interaction between the object's color and the light color leads to the object appearing to be a different color under different colored lights.
If an object reflects the entire spectrum of light, it appears white to the human eye. This is because white light contains all the visible colors of the spectrum, and when an object reflects all these colors, it appears white.
It would look cyan because the colors would be filtered.
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.
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.
Yes. Definitely it produces but its intensity will be low.answer 2 In general ONLY opaque objects will produce a shadow. A truly transparent object would not produce a shadow. Look up Opaque in your dictionary.