because of the nature of source producing it...
wavelength and frequency. ultravoilet light has a short wave length and therefore a high frequency, while infrared light has a longer wave length and lower frequency
True. The frequency of light is very fast as it is a wave oscillating at a high rate. This high frequency corresponds to a short wavelength, which is the distance between two consecutive peaks of the wave.
red and blue light differ in wave length because blue lights have shorter wave length than red light and shorter wave length are good for plants germination.
Ultraviolet has the longer wave length Infrared has the lower wave length
length
Long wave light travels at a slower speed than short wave light in a vacuum. This is due to long wave light having a lower frequency and longer wavelength, causing it to interact less with the surrounding medium compared to short wave light.
Just ONE property, the wavelength of the light. The colour of visible light depends on its wavelength. These wavelengths range from 700 nm at the red end of the spectrum to 400 nm at the violet end.
The correlation between the length of a light wave and its frequency is inverse: as the length of the light wave increases, its frequency decreases, and vice versa. This relationship is described by the formula: speed of light = wavelength x frequency.
voilet
This depends on the perspective.As in radiowaves:A short wave is in the range of 3-30 MHz.This wave-length is in the High Frequency specter but still considered "short".There are of course higher and shorter Frequencies.As in visible light:This can be considered to be from 400-790 terahertzRed is a short wave-length of light.andViolet is a high wave-length of light.
Wave length's are one of the most fundamental subjects in physics effecting sound, light and water for example. Learning how the wave length was created allows one to learn much about sound and light.
The energy of a light wave is inversely proportional to its length. In other words, shorter light waves have more energy than longer light waves. This relationship is described by the equation E=hc/λ, where E is energy, h is Planck's constant, c is the speed of light, and λ is the wavelength of the light wave.