Violet light is 375 nanometers.
Violet light has a wavelength of 413 nanometers.
um it would be (approximately) the same wavelength of the green light in nanometers instead of any other color wavelength it would nanometers.
Yes, it does. UV-C wavelength is 200-280 nanometers, UV-B is 280-320 nm, and UV-A is 320-400nm.
For visible light, the wavelength will usually be specified in nm (nanometers).
Violet light has a short wavelength, high frequency, and high energy. Red light has a much higher wavelength than violet light.
Violet light has a wavelength of 413 nanometers.
Ultra-violet light (wavelength approx 10-390 nanometers) lies between visible light (wavelength approx 390-750 nanometers) and X-rays (wavelength approx 0.1-10 nanometers).
um it would be (approximately) the same wavelength of the green light in nanometers instead of any other color wavelength it would nanometers.
blueee!!
Yes, it does. UV-C wavelength is 200-280 nanometers, UV-B is 280-320 nm, and UV-A is 320-400nm.
The wavelength of the color violet is 450-400 nm, which can also be said as 450 to 400 nanometers.
For visible light, the wavelength will usually be specified in nm (nanometers).
Violet light has a short wavelength, high frequency, and high energy. Red light has a much higher wavelength than violet light.
380 nanometers [Violet] to 750 nanometers [Red].1 nanometer = 10 Angstroms.3800 Angstroms [Violet] to 7500 Angstroms [Red].
The wavelength of light (400-700).
Visible light has a wavelength of 400nm-700nm (from violet to red). Ultraviolet rays which starts immediately after the violet region of visible light have their wavelength from 10nm-400nm.(where nm means nano-meter)
around 750 nanometers.