Light waves with long wavelengths
The wavelengths for UV light are shorter than for visible light, but much longer than for x-rays or gamma rays.
Violet light has longer wavelengths.
It means the wavelengths are separated. White light, for example, is actually a mixture of different wavelengths.
No.
Scattering of light
Light waves with long wavelengths
The wavelengths for UV light are shorter than for visible light, but much longer than for x-rays or gamma rays.
A type of sunlight with wavelengths too short to be seen is called Ultraviolet. Oh and your looking this up for a science word search the back has the answers
The answer depends on "compared to what"? UV wavelengths are shorter than x-rays and longer than microwaves.
Violet light has longer wavelengths.
This is the ultraviolet light.
Shorter wavelengths, like gamma rays and X-rays, require more energy to produce than longer wavelengths like visual light.
A type of energy with wavelengths longer than visible light.
It will be right to say that only principles of light microscopy keeps light focused and scatters wavelengths of visible light for the human eye to see.
Here on earth it is violet wavelengths that scatter the most, however the earth's sun emits more blue light than violet so blue wavelengths are scattered more frequently than violet wavelengths.
It means the wavelengths are separated. White light, for example, is actually a mixture of different wavelengths.