Red......................and eeeeeeeeerrrrrrrrrr how could you forget green too!!!!!!!!!!!!!
The color of a beam of light is dependent on its wavelength. A laser will appear as one color because all the light being emitted from it is the same wavelength. This is also why lasers and laser pointers always have such a tight beam. By contrast, flashlights (which have much wider beams, and rely on mirrored interiors to amplify the light) have light at a variety of wavelengths, which is why the light is ultimately "colorless".
A laser beam is a coherent light source that emits a narrow beam of light due to the alignment of its waves. In contrast, light from a tube light is incoherent and emits light in all directions, resulting in a blurry appearance. The difference in coherence and directionality between laser light and tube light accounts for their distinct characteristics.
The intensity of light from most light sources is inversely proportional to the square of the distance from the source. So the intensity two meters from an incandescent lamp is one quarter of the intensity at one meter, and at three meters from the lamp the intensity is one ninth of the intensity at one meter. Laser light ideally has the same intensity at any distance.
Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation
yes,you should be able to...i think why dont you test it?
True, however you mis-spell colour.
A laser produces light of only one color because it emits a single wavelength of light. This is achieved by the specific properties of the laser medium and the optical resonator within the laser cavity that amplifies a specific wavelength. As a result, laser light is highly monochromatic, meaning it consists of a single color or wavelength.
It is formed of electromagnetic radiation - light, with only one wavelength, (one colour); highly directional and focused, that is, the rays of the light of a laser don't disperse much; and all the waves are moving in sinchrony, in phase.
A laser, by its very action of amplification of light, tends to be monochromatic. (one colour). But lasers may be made in several different colours depending on the materials used.
Any color ... the "blue" does not refer to the color of the disk but to the laser light that reads the disk.
Lasers have only one colour & are focused on an area while ordinary light is made of the colours you see in a rainbow and fan out.
no
The color of a laser beam is determined by the type of material used in the laser, such as a specific gas or semiconductor. These materials emit light at a specific wavelength, resulting in a single-color beam. Additional optics can be used to combine different lasers to produce multiple colors in laser light shows.
The toner powder in a laser printer is sealed inside a toner cartridge, and it is the wholecartridge that is replaced. A mono laser has a single cartridge, while a colour laser will have a cartridge for each colour.
A laser produces coherent light that is monochromatic, meaning it emits a single color or wavelength of light. In contrast, ordinary light consists of multiple wavelengths, producing a range of colors. This is why lasers are often used in applications that require precise and specific colors.
No. Laser light is coherent. Light bulb light is not.
Probably fluorine.