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Different wavelengths of visible light are different colors.
As different colors.As different colors.As different colors.As different colors.
Approx. 350 nm.
what processes produce the different colors we see in opaque objects
Here are the colors ranked in order of wavelength intensity:Visible Spectrum (What we can see)RedOrangeYellowGreenBluePurpleWe can't see infrared, which has larger (less intense) wavelengths than red, or ultra violet, which has smaller(more intense) wavelengths than purple
Different wavelengths of visible light are different colors.
Most humans eyes are sensitive to wavelengths between about 400 nanometers and 700 nanometers
The light bounces off objects and then is delivered to your eye, and then the brain scans it. You can see color because the different wavelengths of light have different color - longer wavelengths are warm colors (red, yellow, orange, and similar colors) and shorter wavelengths are cool colors (blue, green, indigo, brown, etc).
As different colors.As different colors.As different colors.As different colors.
Approx. 350 nm.
There are only certain wavelengths that can be accepted and absorbed by chlorophyll molecules. The rest are instead reflected - the colors that you can see. Without those wavelengths, you do not have photosynthesis.
The light bounces off objects and then is delivered to your eye, and then the brain scans it. You can see color because the different wavelengths of light have different color - longer wavelengths are warm colors (red, yellow, orange, and similar colors) and shorter wavelengths are cool colors (blue, green, indigo, brown, etc).
The light bounces off objects and then is delivered to your eye, and then the brain scans it. You can see color because the different wavelengths of light have different color - longer wavelengths are warm colors (red, yellow, orange, and similar colors) and shorter wavelengths are cool colors (blue, green, indigo, brown, etc).
Colours are not invented. We see different colors because there are different wavelengths of light and our eyes are able to see a broad range of them. Color is actually just reflected wavelengths of light. An object or substance will absorb all the other wavelengths, and the ones that it doesn't are the colors that we see. Purple can be found in many instances in nature as well; stones, flowers ect..
what processes produce the different colors we see in opaque objects
Color is the perception of wavelength. We see the colors means that we are seeing the waves with a specific wavelengths.
absorption and reflection of different wavelengths of light