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It is 90 degrees more than the original angle.
Yes, by 30 degrees.
An angle which is more than 180 degrees but less than 360 degrees is called a reflex angle.
An angle that measures more than 90 degrees and les than 180 degrees is an obtuse angle.
How many degrees in what? Your question needs more information.
The sun does because it's light reflects off the moon. The more light reflected the bigger the shape. The less light reflected, the smaller the shape.
Fewer colors of light are reflected and more aare absorbed
More or less the same as when the light falls anywhere else. Part of the light will be reflected, part of it will be absorbed. Light will usually not pass through a can, which is not transparent for visible light.
Many things are reflected from natural light, for example: Solar power light, iron, metal, tin foil and planets (all), moon, mirror. But there are much more too.
That would depend on the quality of the mirror. If the mirror reflects a greater percentage of the light, then the light can be reflected more times, before it becomes too faint to be recognizable.That would depend on the quality of the mirror. If the mirror reflects a greater percentage of the light, then the light can be reflected more times, before it becomes too faint to be recognizable.That would depend on the quality of the mirror. If the mirror reflects a greater percentage of the light, then the light can be reflected more times, before it becomes too faint to be recognizable.That would depend on the quality of the mirror. If the mirror reflects a greater percentage of the light, then the light can be reflected more times, before it becomes too faint to be recognizable.
More or less yes, basically the red paint absorbs all of the colours of light except for the red light which is reflected. It is this reflected red light which we see.
Light is energy. More light is reflected by light coloured surfaces. Therefore...
Some light that falls on any surface is scattered back (reflected). A rough surface tends to scatter the light in different directions while a smooth surface tends to scatter more of the original (incident) rays straight back. This explains why a smooth surface reflects a "clearer" image than that reflected from a rough surface.
Light that's absorbed is not there any more for anyone to see. You 'see' an object by the light that's reflected from it. If you see color, then it's the color that's NOT absorbed.
It is 90 degrees more than the original angle.
Whenever light hits a water surface, some of the light is reflected off, and some of it is refracted, or "bent", deeper into the water. The proportion that is reflected and refracted depends on the wavelength of the light and the angle of incidence. When light goes straight down into the water, most of it penetrates the surface and goes into the water. When the light impacts at an angle, more of the light is reflected away.
White, since we can only see the color when all of the light hitting it is reflected.