because light used to see an object must have a wavelength
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.
Because the Sun's photosphere is so much brighter in visible light (most of the light the Sun's corona emits is ultraviolet). It is necessary to block the light from the Sun's photosphere to see the Sun's corona.
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.
Venus itself doesn't generate much visible light. There may be some electrical activity in its atmosphere that generates some light, but it's minimal. The light we see from Venus is mostly reflected light from the sun.
no you cant no you cant
If your vision is normal, then you CAN see visible light.
In order to "see" something with eyes, the object must be longer than the light wave refracted from it. Molecules are too small to be refracted.
Visible light cannot be used to see molecules because the wavelength of visible light is much larger than the size of molecules. This means that visible light cannot resolve the small details of molecules, making them invisible to the human eye.
In order to "see" something with eyes, the object must be longer than the light wave refracted from it. Molecules are too small to be refracted.
No. Atoms and molecules are far smaller than the wavelengths of visible light, so light cannot be used to image them.
Visible light cannot be used to "see" molecules because the wavelength of visible light is much larger than the size of molecules, making them invisible to the human eye. Alternative methods for visualizing molecules include electron microscopy, atomic force microscopy, and X-ray crystallography. These techniques use different forms of radiation or physical probes to create detailed images of molecular structures at a much smaller scale than visible light can achieve.
Ultraviolet light and infrared light are two types of light that humans cannot see. Ultraviolet light has shorter wavelengths than visible light, while infrared light has longer wavelengths. Both types of light are beyond the visible spectrum for humans but can be detected with specialized equipment.
visible light
visible light
Visible means "what you can see" - so yes.
Air does not absorb or reflect enough light to be visible, regardless of what temperature it is.
Visible light.