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2006-11-10 13:38:38 · 7 answers · asked by Link 4 in Science & Mathematics Physics

7 answers

Well, to start off, some waves fall into different parts of a range called the elecrtomagnetic spectrum. Color all depends on which waves of white light are absorbed and reflected. Since white light (well, mostly white light, like from a light bulb or the sun) contains all colors of the visible spectrum (the part of the electromagnetic spectrum that humans can see), whenever it contacts a surface some of the colors/waves are absorbed while others are reflected. If an object is green for instance, it absorbs the other colors and reflects the green, therefore your eye only sees the green emiting from it.

2006-11-10 14:01:39 · answer #1 · answered by jfbird1986 2 · 0 0

Whether the material absorbs all but a particular frequency of light or reflects that frequency off in a different direction than the other frequencies which make up white light. Plants are green because they don't absorb the green sprectrum of light. If you put a plant in only green light it will die.

2006-11-10 13:42:29 · answer #2 · answered by William E 5 · 0 0

you ought to initiate with the help of doing something diverse. I recommend face it, that is been achieved a million circumstances and on no account gets to any extent further thrilling. to respond to your question with extremely much less sass, you're able to desire to decrease the saturation of each coloration different than those you prefer to maintain bright. i'm on a mac so listed below are some mac-friendly training: in adobe photoshop, open the percentin coloration hit apple + u i think of it starts off at magenta, drag the saturation slider to the far left. on the coolest of the field, replace the drop down menu so as that it reflects the subsequent coloration. decrease saturation. repeat for each coloration (blue, green, cyan, pink, yellow, etc.)

2016-11-23 15:00:33 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Put simply light is color and an object that can absorb light will do so but will only show the color that it wants, example the ocean Blue.

2006-11-10 15:56:15 · answer #4 · answered by matt v 3 · 0 0

The object absorbs all colors of the visual spectrum and only reflects the color that it appears to be.

2006-11-10 13:42:06 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

i think you just want the basics...Matter is made from different elements atoms..Atoms have electrons in shells around it,electrons absorb some of the wave lengths of light that hits it...Depending of the energy of the electrons depends what wave lengths of light it will absorb..Electrons get excited when they absorb light and jump to a higher shell..When they fall back they emit wave lengths of light...Thats the color they emit

2006-11-10 15:09:52 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Objects have a Knack for absorbing every color in the spectrum... except for the color that they want to be... for plants its the pigments in the plant

2006-11-10 13:48:29 · answer #7 · answered by hippoman314 2 · 0 0

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