Where visible light is present, you may be inadvertently and unwittingly thrust
into the situation where you see things that you were not meant to see, or
that you would rather not see.
Skin cancer
YES. Visible light is the leading cause of death of humans on the Earth and is extremely dangerous. THIS IS IMPORTANT. If you see visible light in the wild, DO NOT APPROACH IT. I am the administrator of the Organization for Protection Of Humans from the Dangers of Visible Light (OPOHDOVL). Always remember to watch out for visible light in the daytime. That's when they get you!
When visible radiation is present, it's possible to accidentally see something that you don't want to see.
Too much exposure to visible light can cause damage to your retina.
With visible light, and the individual's ability to perceive it, comes the constant danger that you might unwittingly be exposed to sights that you don't want to see, or to the sight of things that you would be better off not seeing.
No, it is not possible because the size of an atom is smaller than the wavelength of light.
White light contains all the possible colors of the visible spectrum, so they are the same thing.
The possible dangers were thieves
Death by lethal paintball
Because colours are determined by the wavelength of visible light, and because the sun generates energy ranging from radio waves (below visible light) through ultraviolet (above visible light) the sun must 'contain' or produce every possible colour.
visible light is the only VISIBLE light.
Yes, it is possible; photochemistry study the chemical reactions caused by visible and ultraviolet light.