visible light of course
The color white is not associated with a specific wavelength of light because white light is a combination of all visible wavelengths of light.
White light.
White light is a mixture of all the wavelengths of the visible spectrum. Visible light ranges from approximately 400 to 800 nm in wavelength. Wavelength of yellow light is565-590 nm.We perceive electromagnetic radiation with a wavelength between 565 and 590 x 10-9 m as yellow light.
The relationship between the wavelength of white light in the spectrum and its corresponding color is that different wavelengths of light correspond to different colors. White light is made up of a combination of all the colors in the visible spectrum, with each color having a specific wavelength. When white light is separated into its individual colors, each color is seen based on its specific wavelength.
The longest wavelength / lowest frequency visible light is the red end of the spectrum. The shortest wavelength / highest frequency visible light is the violet end of the spectrum.
Violet light has the shortest wavelength of all visible light.
Red light has the longest wavelength among all the colors in the visible spectrum.
Yes, light can have a single wavelength, which would correspond to a specific color in the visible spectrum. Different sources of light emit light with varying wavelengths, resulting in the various colors we perceive.
If you're talking about how long it takes light to get from here to there ... all wavelengths of light, as well as all wavelengths of every other example of electromagnetic radiation, all travel at the same speed.
At a single wavelength, it is called monochromatic
Yes, plane mirrors reflect all wavelengths of light in the same way. The reflection of light off a mirror does not depend on the specific wavelength of light.
Refer to the EM spectrum to find exact answer about this question. Usually wavelengths are listed at bottom and frequency on top of the spectrum. Gamma rays have the smallest wavelength.