RuroumiKenshin
Why do darker colors absorb heat/light?
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Originally posted by MajinVegeta
Why do darker colors absorb heat/light?
More minor clarification: The color is caused by BOTH what is absorbed and what is reflected (for opaque objects).The question needs minor re-phrasing. You see, the fact that something is a certain color is caused by it's absorbing certain wave-lengths of light (not the other way around).
Originally posted by Another God
Now that the question has been re-phrased, perhaps someone would like to answer it?
Oh, OK...i'll do it...
What they mean Majin, is that our experience of colour occurs because only particular light wavelengths of the spectrum are reflected. The wavelengths which are reflected are what we see, and the wavelengths which are absorbed are the colours we do not see.
So a green leaf, is actually absorbing all of the colours which are not green (to oversimplify...)
As for colours absorbing heat. I ahve never heard that as such. Colours = Light though, and light = energy, and energy = heat... maybe there is some sort of connection there.
Yeah, the connection is the one you made. By the commutative property of math, light = heat (more or less). Every color corresponds to a specific temperature.As for colours absorbing heat. I ahve never heard that as such. Colours = Light though, and light = energy, and energy = heat... maybe there is some sort of connection there.
You mean you DIDN'T have one in your high school physics lab? Wtf?!I saw it on the deleted scene of "The Time Machine".
Originally posted by Loren Booda
If you hold up a vial of chlorophyl dissolved in alcohol, its reflected light (light behind you) appears green, but its transmitted light (light behind vial) appears red! The differences between frequencies times Planck's constant must be close to the reaction energy of ATP<-->ADP?