Sir Isaac Newton, he of gravity fame, also did work on spectra. He wrote a treatise named 'Optics', where he demonstrated the splitting of white light into the colours of the rainbow.
Isaac Newton is credited with creating the first color spectrum by passing white light through a prism and observing the separation of colors. This led to the discovery of the visible spectrum of light.
The rainbow displayed a beautiful spectrum of colors.
No, an absorption spectrum and a bright line spectrum are not the same. An absorption spectrum is produced when light is absorbed by atoms or molecules, showing dark lines at specific wavelengths. On the other hand, a bright line spectrum is produced when atoms or molecules emit light at specific wavelengths, creating bright lines in the spectrum.
The plural of spectrum is "spectra."
The Color Spectrum was created in 2010.
Long before the Earth was.
George Antheil and Hedy Lamarr
Sir Clive Sinclair. His first attempt at a mass produced computer was the SInclair ZX80. This was followed by the Sinclair ZX81, and subsequently the ZX Spectrum.
Isaac Newton is credited with creating the first color spectrum by passing white light through a prism and observing the separation of colors. This led to the discovery of the visible spectrum of light.
Seiko-Epson? lol... No. I'm sorry. Al Gore did.
X-rays were not invented, they were discovered. They are part of the electromagnetic spectrum and a natural phenomena.
Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen invented it
bacause the spectrum means spectrum so the spectrum is known as spectrum is called as spectrum
The range of wavelengths in the electromagnetic spectrum that we consider to be "blue" was not invented - it is a natural occurring phenomenon - just as gravity was not invented. The word "blue" we use to describe a color, according to the Online Etymological Dictionary, was first used circa 1300.
le spectrum
spectrum
I suppose you mean the visible spectrum, only a small part of the entire electromagnetic spectrum. The visible spectrum is basically all of the colors the human eye can detect.