Water colour!
2006-08-12 04:18:25
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answer #1
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answered by chicho 2
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(in art and design)If I say transparent, Transparent is not a name in colour album. (in science) the 2 components of water chemically re colourless. Naturally, God created water to be colourless but sometimes, when we look at the seas or ocean, we may notice that it has a sky colour but its negligible. U will also know that in science that any negligible number cant be used for any calculation. So at the conclusion, water is COLOURLESS
2006-08-12 00:50:51
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answer #2
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answered by Maintain 1
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If water has no particles suspended in it, it is transparent: light passes through it. Light does not reflect off the water molecules. The light that reaches the eye from the water is either reflecting off the surfaces or bottom or sides of the container or it is passing through the water. It is not reflecting off the water molecules. The frequency of the light coming through the water to your eye is not materially affected by passing through pure water. So the frequency is whatever the frequency of the light source is. (Lower frequency em radiation such as microwave - radar is a different matter).
2006-08-12 00:14:19
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Water partially reflects whatever the color of the light shown
on it, but it isn't a perfect reflector - so the light is lessoned
in strength and usually appears grayer. If you shine red
light on it, you get back darker red, etc.
It also attenuates different colors at different rates as light
travels through it. That is, low frequency light (reds, yellows)
get filtered out, where blue range light continues on longer.
So, if you're looking at white light through a lot of water,
it will appear bluish.
2006-08-12 00:14:36
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answer #4
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answered by Elana 7
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i wanna break your answer to this:
what colour is water? you can say colourless!!?
my answer is:
colourless
im studying airs, and what i learned is that oxygen dont have colours
he he
2006-08-12 00:13:54
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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water is all the colors of the rainbow like a prism the light shines through it and therefore we can see it as clear/ transparent. also when u see water in a river etc and its blue it is the blue sky that reflects off the water to give it a blue apperance
2006-08-12 00:12:37
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answer #6
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answered by party_baby_81 2
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bodies of water are blue as it reflects the colour of the sky, whereas the colour of water enclosed in containers depends on the colour of the container.
why? because it is transparent.
2006-08-12 00:17:06
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answer #7
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answered by jose 4
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Water does have a blue tint.
The intrinsic blueness of water is the only example (known) from nature in which color originates from vibrational transitions.
2006-08-12 01:31:56
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answer #8
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answered by jfmm 7
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THE COLOR OF WATER IS:
Blue as a Sunny sky
Black in the night
Red in my coffee mug
and Yellow when mixed with Pineapple juice powder.
2006-08-12 00:15:22
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answer #9
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answered by FastMoments 2
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It's a reflective element. On it's own it holds no color but when it reflects the sky, it's blue, the trees make it green, a cloudy day it's gray. Water holds no color and all color at the same.
2006-08-12 02:45:10
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answer #10
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answered by miblackpearl 2
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