No, red light has the longest wavelength within the visible light spectrum.
No, red is the longest wavelength of visible light, with the lowest frequency and the least energy. Violet light has the shortest wavelenght, with the highest frequency and the most energy (of visible light).
No, red light has the longest wavelength within the visible light spectrum.
Violate light has the shortest visible wavelength. Around 400 nanometers.
The longest visible wavelength of light appears red. "Longest wavelength" is equivalent to 'lowest frequency'.
The longest wavelength / lowest frequency visible light is the red end of the spectrum. The shortest wavelength / highest frequency visible light is the violet end of the spectrum.
Deep dark red is the visible light with the longest wavelength. Violet is the visible light with the shortest wavelength.
Nope. Wrong end of the visible spectrum.
Nope. Wrong end of the visible spectrum.
Violet has the shortest wavelength while red has the longest.
Yes. And the longest is therefore red.
The shortest wavelength of visible light for your eye is the wavelength of the lastcolor you can see on the blue end of the rainbow. It may be slightly different forsomeone else's eye.
Yes. The longest visible wavelength / lowest visible frequency is the last color you see on the red end of the 'rainbow'. The shortest visible wavelength / highest visible frequency is the last color you see on the violet end of the 'rainbow'. These limits are not exactly the same for every human eye.