Why Does a Black Object Reflect Light Despite Absorbing All Colours?

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A black object appears black because it absorbs all colors of light, yet it still reflects some light due to its surface properties. The reflection occurs when the absorbed light alters the electronic configuration of the object's molecules, allowing some light to be reflected instead of absorbed. Additionally, the law of black bodies indicates that objects can reemit absorbed light energy, although this is often not visible. The color of an object is defined by the wavelengths it reflects; for instance, a red car reflects red light while absorbing others. Overall, even black objects reflect a small amount of light, preventing them from being completely invisible.
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why the light reflected by a object is not the object's colour but it is sunlight?for example , a black object absorb all colour so we can see it is 'black' but why it still reflect some light when we watch it/
 
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I'm not sure but here's what I think. There are two ways I can think of for the object to reflect some of the light: first, the light that is absorbed by object changes the electronic config. of the molecule's electrons and if at that same moment another wave of light hits the molecule rearranged, maybe that molecule won't have the same absorbant effect on light and may reflect it instead. Second, there is a the law of black bodies that say that depending on the temperature, an object reemits all or some of the light energie it receives, usually this light is not visible but it could be.

hope this satisfies you.. at least a little bit.
 
thx

thx very much
 
Also, if a black object were totally black, it would essentially be invisible. Every black object you've seen refelcts a little bit of light.

An object's color is determined (less technical than Mikado's good response) by what it absorbs and reflects. A red car is red because it absorbs everything except red. An object that reflects (but scatters) all colors is white - an object that reflects all colors at the angle of incidence is a mirror.
 
There is another effect, having to with Brewster angle, where light is totally reflected, irrespective of the surface material. I am not too well acquainted with it. Try google?
 
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