Violet: 380 - 450 nm
Blue: 450 - 475 nm
Green: 495 - 570 nm
Yellow: 570 - 590 nm
Orange: 590 - 620 nm
Red: 620 - 750 nm
'nm' means 'nanometre'. One nanometre is 0.000000001 metres.
The visible violet light has a wavelength of about 400 nm. The visible indigo light has a wavelength of about 445 nm.
The visible blue light has a wavelength of about 475 nm.
The visible green light has a wavelength of about 510 nm.
The visible yellow light has a wavelength of about 570 nm.
The visible orange light has a wavelength of about 590 nm.
The visible red light has a wavelength of about 650 nm.
blue is 10-400000000
red 4-69
green 4-2
violet 10-200
the rest is too violet.
The visible light wavelengths are 400 - 700 nm.
red orange yellow green blue dark blue purple
roughly between 380 - 750 nanometers
Every color that is perceptible by the human optical system is in the rainbow. Each wavelength within the visible band is a different 'color', whether or not the eyes of one individual or another can tell the difference between them. The spectrum of wavelengths is continuous. So technically, there are an infinite number of different wavelengths, and no limit to the number of colors, whether or not they all have names.
Because "color" is an interaction between the visible light portion of the electromagnetic spectrum and the light sensitive parts of our eyes. Our eyes have evolved 4 different receptors--one each for Red, Green and Blue and another for violet. A rainbow actually contains millions of colors, but we have evolved to categorize most of the wavelengths in the visible spectrum as one of the primary colors and their combinations.
Rainbow colors are: Red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, violet (ROYGBIV). As a 'rainbow' is refracted light it is something that is hard to study, although it can be reproduced to a point. I would say that all colors, basically, are there. It simply depends on where you are when you can see it. Keep in mind that black, being the absence of light/color is not included in that group. black
In a spectrometer, each dye will absorb light of certain colors and transmit light of other colors because of the nature of the atoms of the object and the frequency of the light. If the frequency of the light is the same as the frequency that the electrons in the atoms are vibrating, then the light will be absorbed and transferred into vibrational motion.
Kansas-Black Oklahoma-Blue New Mexico-rainbow color
Every color that is perceptible by the human optical system is in the rainbow. Each wavelength within the visible band is a different 'color', whether or not the eyes of one individual or another can tell the difference between them. The spectrum of wavelengths is continuous. So technically, there are an infinite number of different wavelengths, and no limit to the number of colors, whether or not they all have names.
Because "color" is an interaction between the visible light portion of the electromagnetic spectrum and the light sensitive parts of our eyes. Our eyes have evolved 4 different receptors--one each for Red, Green and Blue and another for violet. A rainbow actually contains millions of colors, but we have evolved to categorize most of the wavelengths in the visible spectrum as one of the primary colors and their combinations.
Roy G Biv is a memory aid used to recall the order of the colors of a rainbow or the rainbow pattern (spectrum) created when a prism breaks up white light by refracting different wavelengths (colors) of light by different amounts. The order isRedOrangeYellowGreenBlueIndigoViolet
Each color of the rainbow.
A rainbow is a natural prismatic phenom. White light, containing all colors, strikes water particles in mid-air. Just like with a prism, the light must pass thru the moisture and as it does, the light is broken down into it's different wavelengths. They are represented in order of speed from which they pass thru the moisture. The wavelengths and speed at which each respective color of light passes thru the moisture does not change, so therefore, every rainbow is always comprised of the same colors and displayed in the same order.
A rainbow is caused from light scattered by raindrops. Sunlight is composed of many different colors, each with its own wavelength, meaning each color diffracts at a different angle causing the different colors of the rainbow. A rainbow is an optical phenomena - so it is not made of particles.
White light is made of the rainbow's 7 colors. Each color has a different wavelength, and some of the color's wavelengths are either too short or too long to pass the raindrops, so they reflect inside the raindrops.
Rainbow colors are: Red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, violet (ROYGBIV). As a 'rainbow' is refracted light it is something that is hard to study, although it can be reproduced to a point. I would say that all colors, basically, are there. It simply depends on where you are when you can see it. Keep in mind that black, being the absence of light/color is not included in that group. black
Plaid is not in the rainbow. The rainbow consists only of pure colors- red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo and violet. Plaid consists of stripes of different colors at a right angle to each other.
Rainbow is a combination of seven colors and each individual color has its own significance. It gives the psychological strength in that when people of different caliber and better qualities combine a new variety which is more superior to individual effect can be observed. Looking at rainbow helps to revive the dying spirit.
Green
The Gay Pride flag, also known as the Rainbow Flag has a total of six colors. One color for each color of the rainbow. It is used to mark an establishment as "gay friendly".