No, its an absorption spectrum
your spectrum is stupid
The light from very distant stars may be seen and analysed for elemental composition. Similarly with the microwave radiation from the Big bang.
The plural of spectrum is "spectra."
The Color Spectrum was created in 2010.
Yes - you can see all colors of the spectrum in Space.
To detect different wavelengths of the electromagnetic spectrum.
Yes, it does!
Due to the atmosphere and atmospheric pressure on the planet Earth the viewing of the Electromagnetic spectrum will or can be seen. It will be seen as a blur due to these atmospheric problems, hence the reason Nasa has puts telescopes in space and on high elevated places.
Neptune appears blue due to the methane gasses in the atmosphere absorbing the red light spectrum and reflecting the blue light spectrum back into space.
Sudhakar M. Pandit has written: 'Modal and spectrum analysis' -- subject(s): Modal analysis, Spectrum analysis, State-space methods
The range or spectrum of environmental conditions and habitat characteristics that support the normal activity of an organism.
infrared radiation
x-rays do not penetrate the earths atmosphere there for it has to operate in space in order to view this part of the electromagnetic spectrum
All stars radiate infra-red along with the rest of the spectrum.
this is radiation in the microwave part of the electromagnetic spectrum which comes from all directions in outer space
No, light travels fastest through a vacuum (ie, in space). This applies to the entire EM spectrum.