All other colours are absorbed by the blue object only letting the blue light be reflected or through
Red cloth illuminated by white light will reflect the red portion of the light spectrum, making it appear red.
The object will appear white. When an object reflects all colors of light equally, it will appear white because white light is a combination of all colors in the visible spectrum.
The object appears to have the color of the light that it is worst at absorbing. That'sthe color of which the most light remains to be scattered and reflected to your eye.
The object will appear white because it reflects all colors of light equally, resulting in a white appearance.
The object will appear white under white light if it reflects all the colors of light. This is because white light is a combination of all visible colors in the spectrum.
Red cloth illuminated by white light will reflect the red portion of the light spectrum, making it appear red.
The object will appear white. When an object reflects all colors of light equally, it will appear white because white light is a combination of all colors in the visible spectrum.
The object appears to have the color of the light that it is worst at absorbing. That'sthe color of which the most light remains to be scattered and reflected to your eye.
The object will appear white because it reflects all colors of light equally, resulting in a white appearance.
The object will appear white under white light if it reflects all the colors of light. This is because white light is a combination of all visible colors in the spectrum.
A white object would appear to be red under a red light because the object reflects red light and absorbs other colors. This is because the color of an object depends on the wavelengths of light it reflects.
When white light falls onto an object, the object will absorb some of the light and reflect the rest. The color of the object that we perceive is the result of the wavelengths of light that are reflected. If an object appears white, it means that it is reflecting all visible wavelengths of light equally.
You really can't do exactly what you want. The closest you can get is to view an ENTIRE SCENE including this red object using a red filter, with the scene brightly illuminated (with either red or white light). Then your visual system will have no basis to assign the color red to this red object and it will appear as a shade of gray (to black or white, depending on how much light is absorbed by this object).
A white object emits light in all/most of the visible spectrum evenly.Because it reflects all the light back.
If an object absorbs all colors of light and reflects none, it will appear black under white light. This is because black is the absence of any reflected light.
Why do you call it a "white object" ? Could it be because it looks white under white light ... light composed of every color ? Well then, the object must reflect every color. So it appears to be the color of whatever light you illuminate it with. Yellow under yellow light, etc.
When red light shines on a red object, the object will reflect the red light and appear red. If white light shines on a red object, the object will absorb all colors except red, which it will reflect, making it appear red as well.