With the naked eye, the part between 400 and 700 nanometers called the visible spectrum. Red to Violet/Blue. Humans can NOT see ultraviolet light, only what is reflected off using something within the visible spectrum. Humans also can NOT see infrared light without special instruments.
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∙ 13y agoAyah Al-athwari
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∙ 11y agoOnly the small spectrum of visible light can be seen with the naked eye. All others are outside the human wavelength range
anything longer than roughly 750 nanometers or shorter than roughly 380 nanometers
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∙ 8y ago
In one of the most stunning coincidences in all of science and nature, the human eye
responds energetically to every wavelength of electromagnetic radiation in the Visible band,
and not at all to any wavelength that is not included in the Visible band.
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∙ 12y agoI am not sure why, but if it's from chapter 28 Earth Science, the answer is VISIBLE LIGHT.
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∙ 10y agoHumans can only see ultraviolet on rare occasions.
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∙ 14y agoInfrared!
NO, HUMANS CAN SEE LIGHT BETWEEN THE WAVELENTHS OF VIOLET AND RED. HUMANS CANNOT SEE ULTRAVIOLET OR INFRARED LIGHT.
black because as it absourbs light true black is invisable to the human eye.
Didn't you ever see a star? - Light is a type of electromagnetic wave.
It is a cumulus cloud.
The most simplistic answer would be to look at how many light sensitive cells we have- around 120 million, which equates to about 120 megapixels resolution.
NO, HUMANS CAN SEE LIGHT BETWEEN THE WAVELENTHS OF VIOLET AND RED. HUMANS CANNOT SEE ULTRAVIOLET OR INFRARED LIGHT.
The part that can be seen by human eyes is called visible light.
Light energy is the type of energy that is gained from the sun. It is essential to keep the planet warm and for animals and humans to see.
normal band of light
light is very help ful to humans because humans need light to see dark and humans need light so they can do their work. that's all i think
Humans are able to see light (hence called "visible light" on the electromagnetic spectrum). Otherwise, you couldn't see anything. (And I have a B in science class...PLEASE)
Humans can see light all the way from red to violet, but not morethan red (infrared) nor more than violet (ultraviolet).
Yes, they can see in low-light conditions better than humans.
light radiation
They can. While human eyes can not "see" infrared light, humans can detect this light as "heat" on the surface of the skin.
Turn on the flashlight, humans eyes can see object in light.
There is only one type of wave that humans can see. Visible light. If the wave given off by the electric power line is visible light, then yes. If it is any other type of wave than it is not possible to see.