Yes, a shiny object can still cast a shadow when light shines on it. The shadow may not be as distinct as with a non-shiny object, but it will still be present due to the object blocking the light.
They couldn't shine AND have a shadow on them at the same time, as when something shines it is reflecting light. A shadow is an area where little/no light is reaching due to something between it and the light source.
Yes, a mirror is a shiny object that reflects light.
No, an object doesn't have to be shiny to reflect light. All objects reflect light to some extent, even if they are not shiny, because light can bounce off their surface regardless of their texture or appearance.
Shininess is caused by how light interacts with the surface of an object. Smooth surfaces reflect light more uniformly, creating a shiny appearance as the light is not scattered in different directions. Shiny objects tend to have highly polished or smooth surfaces that reflect a lot of light, making them appear glossy or reflective.
Yes, the reflection of light by a shiny metallic object is a physical change. This is because the metallic object remains the same substance before and after reflecting light, with no new substances formed.
They couldn't shine AND have a shadow on them at the same time, as when something shines it is reflecting light. A shadow is an area where little/no light is reaching due to something between it and the light source.
Moon cannot shine alone.When sun light fall on moon,moon reflect sunlight.That reflection shows the moon as a shiny object.
Yes, a mirror is a shiny object that reflects light.
No, an object doesn't have to be shiny to reflect light. All objects reflect light to some extent, even if they are not shiny, because light can bounce off their surface regardless of their texture or appearance.
The word shiny is an adjective, a word that describes a noun: a shiny car; shiny hair.The verb is to shine (shines, shining, shined): We need to shine a light on this.The noun form is shine (shines): The shine on my shoes made them look brand new.
Shininess is caused by how light interacts with the surface of an object. Smooth surfaces reflect light more uniformly, creating a shiny appearance as the light is not scattered in different directions. Shiny objects tend to have highly polished or smooth surfaces that reflect a lot of light, making them appear glossy or reflective.
Yes, the reflection of light by a shiny metallic object is a physical change. This is because the metallic object remains the same substance before and after reflecting light, with no new substances formed.
How shiny a object is defines how much light it reflects, it is not a definition of a color. Shiny is also a ablum by The Bang.
A shadow does not show the details of the object whereas an image shows the exact details of the object.A shadow is formed due to blocking of light by an opaque object, while the image is formed due to reflection from an opaque, smooth and shiny surface.A shadow is always dark while the image shows true colors of the object.
I believe that shiny surfaces reflect radiant energy.
Tungsten has a medium to high luster, shines like silver
Darker colour indicate better absorption of light. Shiny surface is due to it reflect off the light. When the object to totally dark it is because it absorb all the light and transform to heat. You might want to proof it by placing black object and shiny object in the sun, wait few hour and see which object is hotter.