Visible Spectrum
Visible Spectrum
well, the rainbow obviously has all the colors, but the answer is brown.
The band of colors produced when white light is separated into all its colors is called a spectrum. This can be seen in a rainbow or when white light is passed through a prism, separating it into its component colors such as red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet.
White light can be separated into different colors through a process called dispersion. This can be done using a prism, which refracts different colors of light at different angles. Each color of light has a different wavelength, causing them to separate as they pass through the prism, creating a rainbow-like spectrum.
The light bends and it is separated in the different colors of the rainbow.
light is white. if you mix the colors of the rainbow you get white. A prism separates the colors, showing a rainbow.
it is called a phiness
When white light is separated, it is dispersed into its different constituent colors (spectrum) because each color of light has a different wavelength. This separation is known as dispersion, and it can be observed when white light passes through a prism, creating a rainbow-like spectrum of colors.
A rainbow
The colors of the rainbow, in order, are red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet. When you shine white light through a prism, the light is refracted and separated into these colors based on their wavelengths.
This is called the (visible) spectrum; and may also be referred to as a rainbow.
The visible light spectrum is the part of the spectrum that can be separated into rainbow-like colors. This range of wavelengths extends from about 400 nanometers (violet) to 700 nanometers (red).