All of the colors that you have ever seen, ever will see, or can imagine, are
classified as visible light.
It's logically absurd to argue that there is anything that can be called "color"
and is not visible, or that any visual stimulus exists that has no color.
Anything that can reflect light is only visible to an eye... others which cannot are dark..
All colors. As well as electromagnetic radiation with wavelengths longerthan the longest visible ones and shorter than the shortest visible ones ..."colors" that we can't even see.
Relationship between color and light Different wavelengths, and thus different frequencies, of light are perceived by the human eye as colors. The visible light spectrum ranges from 400nm to 700nm, with 400nm being perceived as violet and 700nm being perceived as red light. The energy of the light dictates its color. An easy way to remember the order of the colors of the visible light spectrum is "ROY G. BIV", or Red Orange Yellow Green Blue Indigo Violet. When one sees an object as a certain color (green leaves on a tree, perhaps), this is due to the light wavelengths that are and are not being absorbed. In the case of green leaves, the chloroplasts absorb most of the wavelengths of the visible spectrum except green. Thus, green light is reflected off of the leaf and the rods in ones eyes perceive the wavelength as green. White Light and Bright Colors Generally speaking, whiter light (comprised of equal amounts of all colors) makes colors appear more natural and vibrant. However, some portions of the spectrum are more important to a light's color makeup than others. Red, blue and green-the primary colors of light-can be combined to create almost any other color. This suggests that a light source containing balanced quantities of red, blue and green light can provide excellent color appearance even if this light source is deficient in other colors in the spectrum.
Sunlight is composed of a spectrum of electromagnetic radiation, including visible light, ultraviolet light, and infrared radiation. The visible light spectrum includes all colors, which can be separated by a prism. The sky appears blue because of Rayleigh scattering, where shorter wavelengths of light (blue) are scattered more than longer wavelengths (red) by the molecules in the Earth's atmosphere. This scattering causes the blue light to be more prominent when we look up at the sky.
The two extremities of the hue continuum are red and violet. These colors represent the endpoints of the visible spectrum of light, with red at one end and violet at the other. The continuum encompasses all the colors in between, creating a smooth transition from one hue to another. This range is often depicted in the form of a color wheel, illustrating the relationships among various colors.
All of it. White light is the blend of all visible colors.
visible spectrum
White light contains all of the colors in the visible spectrum. Black contains none of these colors.
the colors which we can see are called visible colors that appear in visible light spectrum VIBGYOR these are the only visible colors although we can see different colors by the combination of these colors also whit is a visible color
water separate white light into visible light
The primary colors of visible light are red, green, and blue. By combining these colors in different intensities, we can create all other colors that we can see.
There are an infinite number of colors of visible light,and ALL of them are present in a rainbow.
Combining all colors of the visible spectrum results in white light. White light is a combination of all the colors in the visible spectrum and is perceived when all colors are present in equal intensity.
All the colors of the visible light spectrum are made visible.
the electromagnetic spectrum
Visible light.
By frequency into colors (from red to violet).