If you mean radioactive as in atomic or nuclear, not necessarily. Light is radiation, regardless of its color, but not usually radioactive in and of itself. Atomic or nuclear radiation has no color.
However, by the strictest definition, anything that emits radiation of any kind, such as a blue light bulb emitting blue light (which is radiation), could be considered radioactive.
Her favorite color was BLACK!
mutagens
the color of Mrs. Claus eyes are light blue
The addition of blue and red light beams give magenta light.
in blue light a apple is black !
Her favorite color was BLACK!
I need to know
No. They generate light by a process of chemical luminescence and contain no radioactive materials.
it makes a type of blue that is light " light" blue
it makes a type of blue that is light " light" blue
No. It's not green either. Radioactivity is invisible. There's a blueish-green glow (more blue than green) due to something called Cerenkov radiation that's sometimes associated with radioactive objects. But that's just ordinary blue(ish) light, not "radioactivity". (It's still "radiation", of course, as is all other light.)
Light blue.
im to smart for this website
no
Blue light will simply pass through a blue filter, as the filter will only absorb colours which are not blue (red and green).
The sky is light blue as well as a light blue delphinium flower.
You can get a blue license Tague light by switching the light cover with a blue tinted cover. You can also switch the clear light bulb with a blue light bulb.