I believe it to be the Balmer Series.
The visible light portion of the electromagnetic spectrum.
Visible light (lol)
The EM spectrum is a continuous uniform range/domain that has no inherent internal or external boundaries. All delimitation are artificial constructs imposed upon it by man. If you wish to talk about any EM range you agree to definite it for discussion. It does not exists as a natural phenomena.
Hydrogen, then oxygen, then carbon. Your body is 70 percent water, which is two thirds hydrogen and one third oxygen.
Ammonia's chemical name is NH3, so the eleents found in it are 1 atom of Nitrogen & 3 atoms of Hydrogen. Hope that hepls! :P And ammonia is used for cleaning...
In ascending order of the lower energy state involved in the transition, the first six families of lines in the hydrogen spectrum are: Lyman series Balmer series Paschen series Brackett series Pfund series Humphreys series
The (not surprising) name is "visible light."
The color red is the longest wavelength in the visible light spectrum because the less energy a wave carries the longer the wavelength and red carries the least energy of all the colors in the visible spectrum
the visible light spectrum
The visible spectrum is red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet. You can remember this by remembering ROY G. BIV as a man's name.
The visible spectrum.
The visible spectrum
The visible light portion of the electromagnetic spectrum.
No. Visible light, as the name might imply, is the only part of the electromagnetic spectrum that we can see.
The 7 colors of the visible spectrum are Red, Orange, Yellow, Green, Blue, Indigo, and Violet.A good way to remember this is by the name Roy G Biv, because each letter of that name is starting letter of the spectrum colors. (For Example, the y in Roy stands for yellow.)
Simply name any color of light, paper, paint, cloth, hair, car, glass, marker, jello, or crayon that you ever saw. That's a color of the visible spectrum.
The ultraviolet spectrum is 'beyond' (ultra) the violet part of the visible spectrum, that is, beyond the short end of the wavelength range. The infrared spectrum is 'within' (infra) the long end of the wavelength range. The two terms have nothing to do with color, which defines the visible spectrum between violet and red.