This is hard to say, as it one of those questions that scientists do not know. I suggest you come up with your own conclusion :3
Actually, you eyes's can detect 10,000 diferent shades of color.
Because your eyes have cones that detect color. Rods detect black and white.
Your eyes can detect visible light, which is a form of electromagnetic radiation that falls within a specific range of wavelengths. This is why your eyes are sensitive to colors and brightness levels in the environment.
There's a broad band of wavelengths of light coming from a rainbow. They range from wavelengths that are too short for your eyes to detect, all the way to wavelengths that are too long for your eyes to detect. Within that band of wavelengths is the total band that your eyes can detect, and you see them as a spread out display of all the colors that your eyes and brain can work together to perceive.
Eyes detect light and visual information in the form of colors, shapes, and patterns. Light entering the eyes is focused by the lens onto the retina, where it triggers nerve impulses that are then processed by the brain to create the images we see.
No. Snail can not detect the colors
Yes, the invisible spectrum includes wavelengths beyond what our eyes can detect, such as ultraviolet and infrared light. These wavelengths do not correspond to the colors of the rainbow that we can see with our eyes.
The visible light spectrum is the specific region of the electromagnetic spectrum that our eyes can detect. It ranges from approximately 400 to 700 nanometers in wavelength, corresponding to the colors violet through red.
We see colors because of the way our eyes and brain work together to interpret different wavelengths of light. Each color corresponds to a specific wavelength, and our eyes can detect these wavelengths and send signals to our brain, which then processes and interprets them as different colors.
Our eyes detect three types of waves: visible light, which allows us to see colors and shapes; infrared radiation, which we sense as heat; and ultraviolet radiation, which is invisible to the naked eye but can cause damage to our eyes and skin with prolonged exposure.
Human eyes can detect the visible portion of the electromagnetic spectrum, which ranges from approximately 400 to 700 nanometers in wavelength. This includes colors such as red, orange, yellow, green, blue, and violet.
Your eyes can detect the visible light part of the electromagnetic spectrum, which ranges from approximately 400 to 700 nanometers in wavelength. This is why humans can see colors like red, orange, yellow, green, blue, and violet.