If you pass white light through a prism, it will separate out into the individual colors of the visible spectrum.
The colors you see in a rainbow Continuous spectrum :)
Well there is the Electromagnetic (EM) spectrum. Visible light is the light that we can see and they are red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet. On the EM spectrum there is radio/ TV, microwaves, infrared, ultraviolet (UV), xrays,and gamma rays.
Humans are able to see light (hence called "visible light" on the electromagnetic spectrum). Otherwise, you couldn't see anything. (And I have a B in science class...PLEASE)
Visible light.
Visible light spectrum.
False. People can only see the Visible Light spectrum, which is only a small section of the overall light spectrum.
No. We can only see visible light, which is only a small portion of the electromagnetic spectrum.
You can see light that has any wavelength in the visible spectrum,which is a minuscule part of the entire electromagneticspectrum.
No, its just visible light - light is part of the electromagnetic spectrum and is in the middle of it.
Visible light.
The visible spectrum is the light we can see with our own eyes. The colours of the rainbow.
Its not. You can't see ultraviolet. (it lies just above the visible spectrum.)
Yes. All the light we can see is in the visible part of the Electromagnetic spectrum. That is a wavelength range of between about 400 to 700 nanometers.
The visible spectrum of the electromagnetic spectrum of radiation
White light
If you shine white light through a prism, you always get the same result - a spectrum. However, if the environment is brightly lit, you may not see the spectrum as it will be too faint compared to the brightly lit background.