The visible spectrum.
Could be seven colors of the rainbow.... 7CR? 7 Cross Roads? 7 Cute Rabbits? Good question... No, it's definitely 7 colors of the rainbow.
In order for a rainbow to happen it needs to rain. Just after you see the rain is gone a rainbow appears for a short moment. A mixture of rain and light creates a rainbow. You could even use a glass with water and sunlight for a rainbow to appear.
VIBGYOR violet,blue,green,yellow,orange & red.
White light is a collection of all the other colours of light. There is no such thing as "white" light. Water will allow all colours of light to pass through, but it will absorb small amounts of light at certain wavelengths as it passes through. Water absorbs red light (lower energy waves) more than blue light (higher energy waves). Over short distances in water, the amount of light absorbed will be undetectable, but over larger distances the water will take on a dark blue colour as a result of light being absorbed, with more red light absorbed than blue light. The colour you see is what's left of the light after the water has absorbed some of it.
black or brown The length of the hair really doesn't matter, the color of it would.
The word "rainbow" has a long 'a' sound.
Bradie's is blue
There are a number of advantages with a reflecting telescope but the most favourable is the fact that it uses a curved mirror which 'reflects' the image as opposed to a refractor which 'refracts' the image. In short, 'white light' is made up from all of the colours of the rainbow. When using a reflecting telescope, the mirror deflects the entire light make-up in one go so that a sharp focal point can be defined. With a refracting telescope, each individual light colour refracts at a different angle meaning that if you place the focusing lens in position for say violet, it will be out of focus for the other six colours.
Black holes and rainbows are both phenomena related to light and gravity, but they are very different. Black holes are extremely dense objects with strong gravitational pull that can trap light, while rainbows are caused by the refraction and reflection of light in water droplets. In short, the relationship between a black hole and a rainbow is that they both involve light and gravity, but they are fundamentally distinct in nature.
All the colours of the rainbow have different wavelengths. For example, violet has short wavelengths, while red has long wavelengths. Visible light appears as white light because it is a mixture of all the colours. Also, chlorophyll is the principal pigment involved in photosynthesis. Chlorophyll absorbs all the different coloured wavelengths, but leaves green as the colour it reflects and as the colour we see.Therefore, white light is best to grow plants under because green light doesn't do much of anything for photosynthesis.
Well I'm not sure what you're asking but fluorescent colours are the bright version. For example, fluro green is just a really bright green. The most common fluro colours are green, pink, yellow and orange.
The short answer is, no. Honey brown tends to be a more yellow brown. Light brown should technically be a mixture of all three primary colours in equal amounts then "lightened" by the addition of white.