The violet end of the rainbow is the end with the shortest wavelength (highest frequency). The limits of perception are different for each individual, but industrial photometry considers the lower wavelength limit of human perception to occur at 360 nanometers = 0.000036 centimeter = about 0.000014 inch
Violet light has the shortest wavelength in the visible light spectrum.
Violet light has the shortest wavelength in the visible spectrum.
The color of the shortest wavelength is violet. Violet light has the shortest wavelength within the visible spectrum of light.
Of the visible light spectrum, that would be blue light.
The visible light with the highest frequency and shortest wavelength is the last, bluest light that you can see at the blue end of the spectrum (rainbow).
No, red is the longest wavelength of visible light, with the lowest frequency and the least energy. Violet light has the shortest wavelenght, with the highest frequency and the most energy (of visible light).
Violet, after that comes ultraviolet that the human eye cannot see.
The visible light with the shortest wavelength is the last color you can see on the blue/violet end of the rainbow. It's not exactly the same for all eyes.
The longest wavelength is radio waves, followed by microwaves, infrared, visible light, ultraviolet, X-rays, and gamma rays, which have the shortest wavelength.
Visible light wiith the lowest frequency / longest wavelength produces the last color you can see on the red end of the spectrum. Visible light with the highest frequency / shortest wavelength produces the last color you can see on the violet end of the spectrum.
Yes, it is.
From that list, microwaves have the longest wavelength. Those four items would be arranged by wavelength like this: - Gamma ray (shortest) - X-ray - Visible light - Microwave (longest)