I'm not sure what you intended to ask, but the frequency of electromagnetic radiation increases as the positive real numbers: from approaching the limit of zero Hz at the low end to approaching the limit of infinite Hz at the high end.
Parts of this complete spectrum of frequencies have been given names:
All frequencies below 3 THz can also be called Radio Waves because they can be used for various types of Radio communication and related applications.
NATO divides Radio Waves into the following bands:
IEEE divides Radio Waves into the following bands:
There are several other naming systems for the various parts/bands of the electromagnetic spectrum.
The color spectrum in order of increasing frequency (that also means decreasing band width) is red, orange, yellow, green, blue, violet. So red is the lowest visible frequency. Below that is called infrared and the color with a frequency greater than violet is called ultraviolet. Neither infrared nor ultraviolet is visible to the human eye although there may be other animals that are able to detect them.
The colours are determined by the wavelengths of the light. How they are perceived depends on the brain interpreting the signals from the retina.
infrared, ROY G BIV, ultraviolet, xray, gamma ray, cosmic ray That's the order they fall in when you sort them by frequency or wavelength.
The electromagnetic (EM) spectrum is the entire range of frequencies that electromagnetic radiation can have. The EM spectrum is divided into sections based on the common characteristics that certain frequency ranges have. These sections are, in order from low to high frequency, radio waves, microwaves, infrared waves, visible light (which from low to high frequency is further divided into red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet), ultraviolet waves, X-rays, and gamma rays. You can think of the EM spectrum as an invisible rainbow with visible light being a small part of it. And, like a rainbow, the edges of the divided sections are blurry; i.e. there is no exact frequency where one can say, for example, that this wave is no longer an X-ray, but is instead a gamma ray. it is waves of light in order of their wavelengths and frequencies APEX: A chart of frequencies of light waves.
In order of increasing frequency: (i) radio waves. (ii) microwaves. (iii) infrared. (iv) visible light. (v) ultraviolet. hope this helps =)
The answer is electromagnetic spectrum
The answer is electromagnetic spectrum
Electromagnetic spectrum
Electromagnetic spectrum is a diagram that show the range, or spectrum of electromagnetic waves, in order of wavelength, frequency and energy.
The answer is electromagnetic spectrum
The electromagnetic spectrum is the name for the range of electromagnetic waves when they are placed in order of increasing frequency. The electromagnetic spectrum is made up of radio waves, infrared rays, visible light, ultraviolet rays, X-rays, and gamma rays.
The electromagnetic spectrum is the full range of known electromagnetic radiation, ranging from radio waves to gamma rays. Radio waves are at one end of the spectrum with the longest wavelength and the lowest frequency. Gamma rays at the other end have the shortest wavelength and the highest frequency. (frequency = wave oscillations per second) Most electromagnetic radiation can fall into one of the following categories: Radiowave Microwave Infrared Visible (light) Ultraviolet X-rays Gamma Rays [This list is in increasing order of frequency)
X-rays have a higher energy than ultraviolet rays; less than gamma rays. Therefore, they are between the two. Usually the EM spectrum is shown from left to right in order of increasing frequency; in this case, X-rays are near the right side, next to gamma rays, which are on the far right.
The color spectrum in order of increasing frequency (that also means decreasing band width) is red, orange, yellow, green, blue, violet. So red is the lowest visible frequency. Below that is called infrared and the color with a frequency greater than violet is called ultraviolet. Neither infrared nor ultraviolet is visible to the human eye although there may be other animals that are able to detect them.
In order from lowest frequency to highest: radio, microwave, infrared, visible light, ultraviolet, x-ray, and gamma.
Radio wavesMicrowavesInfrared wavesVisible lightUltraviolet lightX raysGamma raysthe other way around for apex
electromagnetic spectrum