It can put bright purple blobs in front of ones eyes and the bright purple blobs may stay in front of ones eyes for the whole of ones life! So do not try getting ultra violet rays it can harm you!
Yah Right!!!!!!!!
The range of electromagnetic waves that human eyes can detect is known as the visible spectrum, which includes wavelengths from approximately 400 to 700 nanometers. These wavelengths represent the colors of the rainbow, from violet to red. Beyond this range are ultraviolet and infrared waves, which are invisible to the human eye.
The wavelength closest to violet on the electromagnetic spectrum is around 400-450 nanometers. This corresponds to the range of wavelengths that our eyes perceive as violet light.
Light is an electromagnetic radiation. Our eyes are sensitive, the E/M radiation at the light wavelength. Hence we see light. The E/M radiation adjacent to light are Infra-red(IR) and Ultra-violet(UV), which we do not see.
Ultraviolet light has wavelengths slightly shorter than visible light, making it invisible to the human eye. These shorter wavelengths can have harmful effects on the skin and eyes with prolonged exposure. Ultraviolet light is commonly used in industries such as medicine, forensics, and photocopying.
brown first then hazel , blue , gray most common now least green, black, amber, violet , last red. red and violet are on albinos when blood leeks in the blue eyes.
50%
No. "Ultra"-violet is "past"-violet ... higher frequency/shorter wavelengththan anything to which your eyes are able to respond.
Ultraviolet light is too energetic to interact with the chemicals in our eyes, and so it does not produce the effect of sight. A similar statement can be said for infrared, which does not have enough energy.
Our eyes can't see ultraviolet light, so it has no color. The highest frequency our eyes can see is violet, and ultraviolet is above that frequency. The name ultraviolet just means "above violet."
Yes. Their eyes are functional.Yes, they have functional eyes, they can see.but they cant close their eyes, they dont have stomachs, they can see infrared and ultra violet light, and they have a memory span of 6 months.
Yes, the sun rays contain dangerous amounts of Ultra-violet radiation that can hurt your eyes and your skin.
A bee's colour vision extends well into the ultra-violet part of the spectrum, but not so far as ours into the red end of the spectrum. Bees can also distinguish plane polarized light, which we can't.
A honey bee's colour vision extends well into the ultra violet range of the spectrum so thay can see ultra violet light.
My daughter was born with purple-violet eyes that turned grey-blue-yellow after about a week.
That's an unusual way of stating the question. However, human eyes have receptors that are triggered by light waves in a specific range. Ultra violet and inferred are outside that range.
Everything except visible light (cosmic, X-rays, radio, infra-red, ultra-violet, etc.).
Sunglasses labeled 100% UV protection or UV400 will effectively protect your eyes from ultraviolet rays. if you are planning to have it eyeglass direct will be helpful.