The Answer is color. Because color has to do with light and physical properties.
Chat with our AI personalities
Visible light interacts with an object by either being absorbed, transmitted, or reflected. The color of the object is determined by the wavelengths of light that are reflected off its surface. When light is absorbed, it can cause the object to heat up. Transmitted light passes through the object without being absorbed or reflected.
When light strikes an object, the light can be reflected, transmitted, or absorbed.
When visible light strikes an object, it can be absorbed, transmitted, or reflected. The color of the object is determined by which wavelengths of visible light are reflected back to our eyes. Objects that appear white reflect most of the visible light, while objects that appear black absorb most of the visible light.
A visible object that is not a light source is any other object in the universe. Objects that are not light sources reflect light and are thus made to be visible.Examples include:planetspeoplethe mooncarsdogsflowersbooksrocks, either in daylight, or else illuminated by a flashlighta light bulb or LED with the power switched off
No, an object with a diameter of 1594 angstroms will not be visible with a light microscope using a 100X objective. The resolution limit of a light microscope is around 200 nanometers, which is much larger than the size of the object.
Infrared light has longer wavelengths than visible light. Visible light ranges from about 400-700 nanometers in wavelength, while infrared light ranges from about 700 nanometers to 1 millimeter. This difference in wavelength determines how these types of light interact with matter and are perceived by our eyes.
Object that only shine with radio waves and not in the visible spectrum an object hidden by dust that block visible light.