Blue light has shorter wavelength than red light.
Remember ROYGBIV? If you reverse the sequence - VIBGYOR, you have all the colors listed from shortest wavelength to longest wavelength in the visible spectrum.
Or, you can just simply consult an electromagnetic (EM) spectrum.
No. The range of red light wavelength is ~622-780nm whereas the wavelengths of blue light are smaller, ranging from 455-492nm.
Blue color (at 475nm) has a shorter wavelength than green (at 510nm).
a longer wavelength in comparison to what other color? it has a longer wavelength than the other primary colors, but a dark red has a longer wavelength than a lighter red.
Very short, the longest x-ray wavelengths are about the diameter of an atom.
the red light has the longest wave length in visible range and lowest frequency.
Reds have longer wavelengths than Blues.
yes
The wavelength of infra-red light is LONGER than the wavelength of red light, and longer than anything to which the eye responds.
no, the wavelength of infrared light is too long for it too be seen. visible light makes up only a small portion of the electromagnetic spectrum
You have it backwards. The eye perceives long wavelength light as red. It's just how the eye evolved.
The difference between colours determined by the wavelength of the light. Purple is a very short wavelength, red a very long one. So when the water disrupts the light, it changes the wavelength, and thus the colour.
it is short wavelength
The wavelength of infra-red light is LONGER than the wavelength of red light, and longer than anything to which the eye responds.
Going from short wavelength light to long wavelength light, the order goes Red - Orange - Yellow - Green - Blue - Indigo - Violet (ROYGBIV)
The color of visible light with the longest wavelength is red; the color with the shortest is violet. So "ROY G. BIV" lists the colors from long to short wavelength. Just to confuse you, we'll also mention that it lists them from lowest to highest frequency.
no, the wavelength of infrared light is too long for it too be seen. visible light makes up only a small portion of the electromagnetic spectrum
You have it backwards. The eye perceives long wavelength light as red. It's just how the eye evolved.
The difference between colours determined by the wavelength of the light. Purple is a very short wavelength, red a very long one. So when the water disrupts the light, it changes the wavelength, and thus the colour.
Rods, cones that absorb long wavelength light (red),cones that absorb middle wavelength light (green), and cones that absorb short ways length light (blue)
it is short wavelength
Violet light has a short wavelength, high frequency, and high energy. Red light has a much higher wavelength than violet light.
The wavelength is too long to be seen by our eyes.
Visible light has the spectrum VIBGYOR. Violet is at one extreme having highest frequency and red is at the other end having least frequency. Less frequency means having longest wavelength, since wavelength and frequency are inversely related. As we go beyond violet then it is named as ultraviolet. Same way as we go beyond red, then it known as infra red. So its wavelength has to be greater than that of red. Hence longer wavelength for IR radiations. IR is what we call 'thermal' radiation, in other words, 'heat'.
Each colour of visible light has a different frequency. Red has the lowest frequency, meaning it has a long wavelength. Purple has the highest frequency and has a very short wavelength. The order is: red, orange, yellow, green, blue, purple. I hope this helps you!