A Honey Bee.
A lizard. Most lizards can change colors depending on were they are standing and the temperature of the air they are in. I know this because I once talked to a lizard expert at magnetic hill zoo.
It would depend on what breaks up the light, and how much refraction occurs, but Ideally you would see light in its component colors, VIBGYOR Violet, Indigo, Blue, Green, Yellow, Orange, Red.
Humans can see visible light, which is a small portion of the electromagnetic spectrum that includes the colors of the rainbow (red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet). This range of light is between infrared light (with longer wavelengths) and ultraviolet light (with shorter wavelengths).
You can see the Indigo airline emblem on it's wikipedia page here.
Goldfish
You can see the Indigo airline emblem on it's wikipedia page here.
No animal can see all types of light. However, many can see at least some colors and some can also see in infrared or ultra-violet light.
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.
owls, prolly some insects who need to see some blue flowers
White Light is actually made up of all the colours in a rainbow, red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo & purple. An example is easy to see in a rainbow. Sunlight is white light. when it shines into water droplets in the atmosphere the colours of the light is split & forms a spectrum of colour.
They're both organs that allows an animal to see.
light is invisible you can only see the things it bump in to... and when you're saying visible light i think it 's only lasers who fits that description and they are many different colours