Science, asked by subratamaji1953, 5 months ago

in the drawing the water colour is blue. but the water has no colour so why we in the drawing we can do water colour is blue​

Answers

Answered by piyush433062
2

Explanation:

Only a small quantity of water appears clear, not to have clear. The more water present, the larger the body of water, causes the color to appear differently, and so, the color changes.

It mostly will be blue when it's clear, reflecting the sky, and clear water on a clear sunny day and in somewhat shallow water can be any and every shade of blue to blue-green to aqua. The lighter color come from light being reflected through the water on light sandy beaches - The Bahamas for instance. Now water can be deep rich blue, and can be dark gray to green - and you may see that kind of color in very deep water where light isn't reflected back from the bottom. Then there's water that can be almost black color in deep mountain lakes. And you've also got the muddy brown and green water in rivers and ponds where the bottom gets stirred up, and algae may be present in the water.

With the exception of the muddy water, if you took a cupful of water from any of them, it would appear clear, because it's a small quantity. So it is clear still, but in a larger body of water, from pond, pool, river, lake, sea or ocean, the color of the water will be affected by the environment because water appears to absorb and reflect back light and color. Essentially, it's the container the water is in and the reflected light that give it color.

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