How does and object get its color?

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Color perception in objects is determined by the wavelengths of light they absorb and reflect, with the reflected wavelengths defining the object's visible color. The absorption and reflection properties are influenced by the object's molecular structure and chemical bonds. White light, a combination of all visible colors, interacts with objects, leading to selective absorption and reflection. Atoms cannot be directly displayed by light due to their small size; instead, electron microscopes are used for such observations. Understanding these principles is crucial for grasping how color and light interact with matter.
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I know that color depends on wavelenght but what affects the wavelenght? We have white light and it goes on an object there gets its color and then into my eye. So how does that object get its color? And when I am there... is true that single atoms cannot be displayed by light? I think I have heard or read that but I am not sure about this
 
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In general terms, the object will absorb some wavwlengths and reflect others. The color is determined by what is reflected.
 
mathman said:
In general terms, the object will absorb some wavwlengths and reflect others. The color is determined by what is reflected.

look up pigments
 
Remember,white light is actually a combination of all the colors in the visible part of the electromagnetic spectrum. As mathman explained, materials will absorb some light and reflect other light. The color that an object appears is the color that is least absorbed by the material.
 
Ah I understand but what affects that object to absorb some wave length and reflect some wavelenght? Is that by how atoms are shaped? If someone reads this yet, tell me if its true that atoms cannot be displayed by light, please.
 
Ah, I think what you're looking for is what decides the energy level when a photon is emitted?

More energetic photons correspond to light with a shorter wavelength and our eye sees it more towards the blue end of the spectrum, less energetic towards the red end.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electromagnetic_spectrum
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spectroscopy
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wavelength
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Optics

To observe an atom you would need wavelengths short enough to reflect from a very small object, we use electron microscopes for this because they have a small enough cross section to provide useful data.
 
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