No, sunlight contains only three frequencies that appear together as white light
Yes. There is more there, on both ends of the rainbow. The colors that
you see up there are, by definition, the entire visible spectrum.
No. It is not true. It is false.
You see all the colors in a rainbow.
If there were colors, that part of the spectrum would not be invisible.
There are all seven colors of the visible spectrum in a rainbow, some not as distinct under some conditions : red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet.
White light contains all the possible colors of the visible spectrum, so they are the same thing.
water separate white light into visible light
You see all the colors in a rainbow.
White is the combination of ALL of the colors of the visible spectrum or rainbow.
Actually, all rainbows have the SAME colors, namely: all of them from ultraviolet to infrared, the entire visible spectrum.
White light is the combination of all the colors of light in the visible spectrum. When it is divided, it becomes all the colors of the rainbow.
If there were colors, that part of the spectrum would not be invisible.
All the colors of the rainbow minus indigo: red, orange, yellow, green, blue, and violet. There are also other colors--ultraviolet and infrared-- but they are not in our visible light spectrum.
White light contains all of the colors in the visible spectrum. Black contains none of these colors.
All colors visible to the human eye are in the rainbow. They have no specific meaning.
There are all seven colors of the visible spectrum in a rainbow, some not as distinct under some conditions : red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet.
white
An optical prism can be used to disperse light from the sun's spectrum into all of its constituent colors. It is the same concept that gives rise to the phenomenon of rainbows.
the electromagnetic spectrum