Want this question answered?
Light bends in glass dependent on its thickness. Violet comes from the thin part and red from the thick part of a prism.
One example is the visible spectrum : all the colors that you can see.
I think in the ultraviolet region of the electromagnetic spectrum.
This is part of the Electromagnetic radiation spectrum, visible light occupies a small part of this spectrum, but all wavelengths have the same physical properties
That part called infra-red.
Ultraviolet (UV) light.
Ultraviolet (UV) light.
foot and hand
The amount of damage caused by a landslide depends entirely on where the slide occurs. A slide in a remote part of a forest may produce no damage, while one in an urban or suburban environment can cause damage in the millions of dollars.
No, its just visible light - light is part of the electromagnetic spectrum and is in the middle of it.
in the adult part of the life cycle
Every different wavelength of e-m ratiation has a certain amount of energy associated with it. Visible light is a very small part of the e-m spectrum and does not have enough energy to cause severe damage. UV has more energy which makes it capable of interacting with the molecules in the body, causing damage.
The visible spectrum
We call that the visible or optical spectrum.
No, light is not part of the radio spectrum. But, both the radio spectrum and light are part of the electromagnetic spectrum. The electromagnetic spectrum is a range of frequencies from very low to very high. Light frequencies are higher than radio frequencies but both are the same kind of thing.
Your issue is probably not going to be whether or not it is part of coverage A but the whether or not the damage was caused by a covered cause. Underground pipes are usually damaged due to maintenance rather than a covered cause. For it to be a covered cause it must be sudden and accidental damage. Roots causing damage or erosion is not a covered cause. Find out what caused the damage first.
Light bends in glass dependent on its thickness. Blue comes from the thin part and red from the thick part of a prism.