The flower that is known to shrink in light is the "sensitive plant," or Mimosa pudica. This unique plant exhibits a rapid response to environmental stimuli, including light. When exposed to bright light, the leaves and flowers fold up and droop, appearing to shrink. This reaction is thought to be a defensive mechanism to protect against herbivores and environmental stress.
in bright light the pupil shrinks
A Shadow
some flowers shrink in bright light.
It shrinks
It shrinks
The Plant Cell Shrinks
waning
A red flower looks red because it absorbs all colors of light in the visible spectrum except red, which it reflects. When white light, which contains all colors, hits the flower, the red part of the light spectrum is reflected off the flower and that is what we see as the color red.
A red flower viewed by green light will appear to be black.
The motto of Willes Little Flower School is 'Light, More Light'.
No it reflects the red light, thats why we see it as red
When light hits a flower, the pigments in the flower's petals absorb the light energy. This energy is then used in the process of photosynthesis to produce sugars that the plant uses as a source of energy to grow and bloom. The color of the flower is determined by the specific pigments present in its petals and how they interact with light.