No
Your eyes can detect visible light, which is a form of electromagnetic radiation that falls within a specific range of wavelengths. This is why your eyes are sensitive to colors and brightness levels in the environment.
Radiation is invisible to the human eye because it has a wavelength that is outside the visible spectrum. This means that the energy emitted by radiation is not within the range that our eyes can detect, making it invisible to us.
Visible light energy can be sensed by the eyes. The eyes contain light-sensitive cells called photoreceptors that detect visible light waves, which are a form of electromagnetic radiation. This energy is responsible for enabling humans to see colors and perceive the world around them.
Our eyes detect three types of waves: visible light, which allows us to see colors and shapes; infrared radiation, which we sense as heat; and ultraviolet radiation, which is invisible to the naked eye but can cause damage to our eyes and skin with prolonged exposure.
No, because the radiation cannot see with our naked eyes.
Infrared radiation is used by sensors to detect differences in temperature. Infrared sensors detect the thermal energy emitted by objects in the form of infrared radiation, which allows them to measure temperature variances without physical contact.
Wavelengths of light fall within the visible spectrum, which is the range of electromagnetic radiation that the human eye is able to detect. Photoreceptor cells in the retina convert light energy into electrical impulses that are interpreted by the brain as different colors.
We detect electromagnetic radiation in a narrow band of frequencies that we call "visible light" with our eyes. We can feel a broader spectrum of electromagnetic radiation that we call "heat". (There are some overlaps.) We can build tools that detect ANY frequency of electromagnetic radiation, and display that in any format we select.
Heat energy is harder to see than light energy because our eyes are not sensitive to the wavelengths of heat radiation. Light energy falls within the visible spectrum, allowing us to see it, while heat energy falls in the infrared spectrum, which our eyes cannot detect. Heat energy is typically felt as warmth or detected using specialized equipment like thermal cameras.
Our bodies can detect the heat from infra-red light, and will convert some micro-waves directly into heat. Our eyes can (by definition) detect visible light. Our bodies do not detect any EM radiation more energetic than visible until after that radiation has done damage to our bodies. That's why we get a tan from UV light, burns from x-rays, and radiation poisoning from gamma rays.
Electromagnetic waves or radiation. "Light," however, generally refers to that portion of the EM spectrum that our eyes can detect.
Visible light represents the color spectrum seen on Earth. It is a form of electromagnetic radiation that our eyes can detect and perceive as various colors.