Most humans eyes are sensitive to wavelengths between about 400 nanometers and 700 nanometers
Different wavelengths of visible light are different colors.
As different colors.As different colors.As different colors.As different colors.
This is dependent on which viewpoint one looks at this from. From a human viewpoint, crickets are indeed colorblind in that they cannot see certain colors that humans can see. However they can also see violet and ultraviolet wavelengths which humans cannot see. Crickets can see color, but not the color humans can see.
Most humans eyes are sensitive to wavelengths between about 400 nm (violet) and 700 nm (red)
No. They're called the visible spectrum, the range of wavelengths us humans can see.
Of the colors visible to humans, red light has the lowest wavelength. Violet light and white light have the highest wavelengths.
When wavelengths composed of white light are interfered with by matter on their way to our eyes, or when a non-white distribution of light has been emitted.
The light bounces off objects and then is delivered to your eye, and then the brain scans it. You can see color because the different wavelengths of light have different color - longer wavelengths are warm colors (red, yellow, orange, and similar colors) and shorter wavelengths are cool colors (blue, green, indigo, brown, etc).
The colors that you see are the colors that are being reflected back at you
no
Approx. 350 nm.
Visible light.