Right between infrared and ultraviolet. It has higher frequencies than infrared; lower frequencies than ultraviolet.
Most of the EM spectrum is visible light.
It is certainly a very important part, but it is not a major part; 'visible light' makes up only a tiny part of the EM spectrum.
Visible light is a very small part of the EM spectrum and it is intellectual laziness to refer to all EM radiation as light.
between 400 nm and 700 nm
Visible and infra red parts of the EM spectrum
X-rays and visible light are part of the Electro-Magnetic Spectrum or EM Spectrum. The EM Spectrum is a depiction of all EM waves from the longest to the shortest. X-rays have a shorter wavelength than visible light. Our eyes only have the ability to translate a small section of the EM Spectrum into information our brain can process. The section our eyes can translate is the visible light section. Each color we see has a different wave length. You can use a prism to view all the colors of light or just look a a rainbow. X-rays also are deadlier than visible light because of its shorter wavelength. They can go through the body easier than visible light. Google EM Spectrum and you'll get a better answer.
That part is called "visible light", or just "light".
By definition, ultra-violet light is outside the visible spectrum of EM radiation. Thus it is defined as invisible.
The part of the electromagnetic spectrum that we can see is visible light. Visible light consists of the colors of the rainbow, ranging from violet at shorter wavelengths to red at longer wavelengths. This portion of the spectrum is detected by our eyes and is responsible for our sense of sight.
Visible light is the electromagnetic wave that falls within a small band of the broad electromagnetic spectrum. It is the only portion of the electromagnetic spectrum that is visible to the human eye.
It is called visible light.
UV rays are located between visible light and X-rays on the electromagnetic spectrum. They have shorter wavelengths and higher energy than visible light, making them invisible to human eyes but useful in applications like tanning beds and sterilization.