Visible light spectrum.
Actually, the part of the electromagnetic spectrum that we can see is called visible light, not ultraviolet light. Ultraviolet light is outside the visible spectrum and is not visible to the human eye.
when dispersed through a prism: Visible spectrum of light (rainbow) part of (very small fraction) electromagnets spectrum
The part of the electromagnetic spectrum that we can see is called visible light. It is the range of electromagnetic radiation that the human eye is sensitive to, with wavelengths between approximately 400 to 700 nanometers.
Visible light is a small part of the electromagnetic spectrum.
That part is called "visible light", or just "light".
Its not. You can't see ultraviolet. (it lies just above the visible spectrum.)
No, the visible part is called visible light. Ultraviolet is invisible to the human eye.
No reason. Light is an electromagnetic wave so you can call any part of the spectrum either.
Yes.
Visible light is a very small part of the EM spectrum and it is intellectual laziness to refer to all EM radiation as light.
Radiant light energy refers to the energy carried by electromagnetic waves that are visible to the human eye. This energy is part of the electromagnetic spectrum and is responsible for the sensation of sight. It includes all the colors of light that we can perceive.
No, light is not part of the radio spectrum. But, both the radio spectrum and light are part of the electromagnetic spectrum. The electromagnetic spectrum is a range of frequencies from very low to very high. Light frequencies are higher than radio frequencies but both are the same kind of thing.