Yes, visible light (the color spectrum) is a tiny range of the full range of electromagnetic waves. In the related Wikipedia link, there is a picture that shows the colors 'crammed in' to a small range of the spectrum.
Yes, the color spectrum is a small segment of the electromagnetic spectrum that is visible to the human eye. It ranges from the longer wavelengths of red to the shorter wavelengths of violet.
Color is a small segment of the total electromagnetic spectrum that is visible to the human eye. It ranges from violet (shortest wavelength) to red (longest wavelength), with each color corresponding to a specific wavelength of light. The color spectrum includes all the colors of the rainbow, and each color is perceived based on the specific wavelength of light that is present.
Red light.
Light with a wavelength of 489 nm falls within the blue region of the visible spectrum. It is part of the visible light spectrum. Light with a wavelength of 987 nm falls within the infrared region of the electromagnetic spectrum.
Photons with higher energy correspond to electromagnetic radiation with higher frequency/shorter wavelength. In the visible band, the color with the highest frequency is the last one you can see on the VIOLET end of the spectrum.
The blue end of the spectrum has shorter wavelengths than the red end.Whatever color is the last one your eyes can see at the blue end, that's the visible color with the shortest wavelength.
Color is a small segment of the total electromagnetic spectrum that is visible to the human eye. It ranges from violet (shortest wavelength) to red (longest wavelength), with each color corresponding to a specific wavelength of light. The color spectrum includes all the colors of the rainbow, and each color is perceived based on the specific wavelength of light that is present.
Violet light has the shortest wavelength on the electromagnetic spectrum.
The so called visible spectrum. (from red [low frequency] to violet [high frequency].
ultraviolet light
Ok, the electromagnetic spectrum is RadioWaves-Microwaves-Infrared-(red orange yellow green blue violet)-UltraViolet-XRay-Gamma These are part of the visible color spectrum So violet would be the answer.
No, the position of a wave in the electromagnetic spectrum is determined by its wavelength and frequency. The electromagnetic spectrum ranges from radio waves with longer wavelengths to gamma rays with shorter wavelengths.
Answer is simply yes , human eyes is only sensitive to the visible light at the electromagnetic spectrum , however there is a different in wavelength and the frequency depending on the color of the visible light
You cannot see ultraviolet rays, you can only see electromagnetic waves that are within the visible light spectrum; therefore it does not have a color. It is simply referred to as ultraviolet because its respective band on the EM spectrum lies above our visible violet frequencies.
The color of an electromagnetic light wave is determined by its wavelength. Shorter wavelengths correspond to colors towards the blue end of the spectrum, while longer wavelengths correspond to colors towards the red end of the spectrum.
Each chemical element has a different spectrum; and each color has a specific wavelength.
You cannot see ultraviolet rays, you can only see electromagnetic waves that are within the visible light spectrum; therefore it does not have a color. It is simply referred to as ultraviolet because its respective band on the EM spectrum lies above our visible violet frequencies.
Blue and Green make the color Red in the Electromagnetic (EM) Spectrum.