No. White light is a mixture of different colors.
Light comprising just one particular wavelength.monochromatic light consists ofwaves having same wavelenthsmonochromatic light is alight having single wavelenthAnswer 1: a light which has only one wavelength(or frequency) is called monochromatic light. for example - laser is a monochromatic but sunlight is not monochromatic because it contains group of frequency of various colours.Answer 2: It is light of a single (mono) colour (chromata). Monochromatic light cannot be separated into separate colours with a prism. Monochromatic light is light all of the same frequency.White light is not monochromatic as it can be separated into a "spectrum" by a prism, and neither are many other colours, like purple which is basically light lacking in green. Violet light is monochromatic, although because of the limitations of the human visual system it appears to be a sort of purple.Orange and other "Secondary" (human perceived) colours can be monochromatic or they can made with say green light and red light. These are two very different lights, as show by the ability of the prism to reseparate the red and green lights, but because of the limitation of the human eye are perceived the same. Similarly many dyes and combinations of lights will appear the same to most humans, but in fact are completely different spectrally and are only related in how they interact with the human visual system.
The index of refraction varies for different colors of light (i.e., for different wavelengths or frequencies), therefore, a source of white light, like rays from the Sun, can get separated into their components. White light isn't "pure" (monochromatic) light - it is really a mixture of many different colors.
Light from the sun :) Basically the heat of the sun, which we view as light.
why the light of the sun is important.
The planet Uranus is 2.7 light hours from the sun.
The Sun light is not monochromatic.
No exactly the contrary, white light is made up of light of all the colours of the rainbow. And you need to take that literally. The rainbow has these colours because rain acts as a prism and breaks the white light of the sun apart in the colours it is made up of. Because monochromatic means 'of one and the same colour', white light is not monochromatic. LASER light is always monochromatic: all particles have exactly the same wavelength (colour)
Monochromatic light is light of one wavelength. E.g. A red laser has one single wavelength and is therefore categorised as 'monochromatic light'. A standard light bulb emits light of many different wavelengths across the visible spectrum and therefore is not 'monochromatic light'.
Light bulbs aim to emulate the light emitted by the Sun, which radiates as a black body at 6000 degrees C. The light is emitted over the entire visible spectrum. Some bulbs produce monochromatic light, sodium street lights for example.
No, an incandescent bulb i.e. a bulb that emits light by the generation of heat, emits white light and is therefore not monochromatic. For a source to be monochromatic, the light emitted must be of a single wavelength.
Mono means single Chrome means colour So monochromatic means single coloured light Example: Light coming from Sodium vapour lamp ---- Monochromatic means (light) of a single frequency or, what is the same thing, of the same wavelength.
Almost, but it has some spreading. Laser diodes are monochromatic.
Monochromatic light contains light of only one colour (or frequency), while white light contains light of different colours and frequencies.
Monochromatic means "single-color". In contrast, white light is a mixture of many colors. In monochromatic light, each individual piece of light has the same frequency, and the same wavelength. Each piece of light does not necessarily have the same phase; if it does, the light is said to also be coherent.
No, normal white light.
White light is monochromatic light.
monochromatic light