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Like any other electromagnetic wave, there is no limit how far infrared can go.Like any other electromagnetic wave, there is no limit how far infrared can go.Like any other electromagnetic wave, there is no limit how far infrared can go.Like any other electromagnetic wave, there is no limit how far infrared can go.
Yes. Just like any other electromagnetic wave can.
Yes. There are several forms of energy that can be felt, or in other words, detected by our senses. For example, infrared radiation is emitted from warm objects and this can be detected by temperator receptors on our skin. Infrared radiation is due to certain wavelengths of the electromagnetic spectrum and would therefore be a form of energy, electromagnetic energy. The photoreceptors in our eyes are not able to detect infrared wavelengths of light.
Electromagnetic waves have been classified as the mode of production differs from one to the other.
Neither. In vacuum, all electromagnetic radiation has the same speed, regardless of wavelength. It's the speed we call "the speed of light", but it applies to all of those other electromagnetic phenomena too.
Like any other electromagnetic wave, there is no limit how far infrared can go.Like any other electromagnetic wave, there is no limit how far infrared can go.Like any other electromagnetic wave, there is no limit how far infrared can go.Like any other electromagnetic wave, there is no limit how far infrared can go.
No, not in general. It is rather the other way around. Infrared radiation is electromagnetic radiation, and electromagnetic radiation spans multiple types of radiation, from microwaves, light, infrared, ultraviolet, radio, and more. So electromagnetic radiation could be infrared, but that is just one type of electromagnetic radiation
Both are light emitting diodes, but an infrared led emits infrared light in the electromagnetic spectrum. With the naked eye, humans can't see infrared light but many cameras can. Infrared leds are used in remote controls and many other applications.
Yes. Just like any other electromagnetic wave can.
Other members of the electromagnetic spectrum other than ordinary light are gamma rays x-rays, ultraviolet rays,infrared rays, microwaves, radio waves and TV waves
On one side: infrared radiation. On the other side: ultraviolet radiation.
There's no reason that infrared light should move at a speed different from the speed of any other wavelength of light, or for that matter, the speed of any other form of electromagnetic radiation. The speed of infrared light is simply the speed of light in whatever medium it happens to find itself at the moment.
All electromagnetic energy (radio, light, X-rays, etc.) do the same.
Assuming you mean other electromagnetic waves: that would be infrared radiation, microwaves, and radio waves.
All types of lens that see parts of the electromagnetic spectrum other than light. E.g. infrared cameras
Yes. There are several forms of energy that can be felt, or in other words, detected by our senses. For example, infrared radiation is emitted from warm objects and this can be detected by temperator receptors on our skin. Infrared radiation is due to certain wavelengths of the electromagnetic spectrum and would therefore be a form of energy, electromagnetic energy. The photoreceptors in our eyes are not able to detect infrared wavelengths of light.
All types of lens that see parts of the electromagnetic spectrum other than light. E.g. infrared cameras