we are seeing visible light in the following circumstances:
When we see any color,
When see any object,
When we look into a flashlight or headlight beam,
When we are temporarily blinded by a camera flash,
When we watch a movie,
Everything that we see with our unaided eye.
No, infrared waves have longer wavelengths than visible light waves. Infrared waves have wavelengths ranging from about 700 nanometers to 1 millimeter, while visible light waves have wavelengths ranging from about 380 to 750 nanometers.
Infrared waves are shorter than radio waves and longer than visible light waves.
Ultraviolet waves have shorter wavelengths than visible light.
The velocity of visible light waves is the same as the velocity of radio waves in a vacuum, both traveling at the speed of light (approximately 299,792 kilometers per second).
A fluorescent light bulb converts ultraviolet waves into visible light using a phosphor coating inside the bulb. When the UV light hits the phosphor coating, it emits visible light.
Visible light is a type of electromagnetic waves.
Infrared waves warm you providing heat and visible waves enable you to see.
Visible light is an example of electromagnetic radiation.NO it is electromagnetic energy.actually it electromagnetic waves =P
Visible light. (eg sunlight).
Two different types of light waves are visible light waves and ultraviolet light waves. Visible light waves are the only part of the electromagnetic spectrum that our eyes can detect, while ultraviolet light waves have shorter wavelengths and higher frequencies than visible light.
exactly what you said its called visible light.
Electromagnetism is manifest along a continuum between slower radio waves and faster energy gamma waves. Visible light can be found in the range between infrared light (slower than waves of visible light) and ultraviolet light (faster than waves of visible light).
Yes, visible light waves have higher frequencies than radio waves. Visible light waves fall within the range of frequencies on the electromagnetic spectrum that is higher than radio waves.
No, not all electromagnetic waves are invisible. While some, such as radio waves, microwaves, and infrared waves, are invisible to the human eye, others, like visible light, ultraviolet light, and X-rays, can be seen or detected with the right equipment. For example, visible light waves are responsible for the sense of sight.
Ultraviolet light, visible light, X-rays, microwaves, radio waves, infrared waves, and gamma rays are all on the spectrum of light, are all electromagnetic waves (EM waves). Any EM wave can be considered light. EM waves are composed of photons, which has properties of both a particle and a wave. The difference between different waves on the EM wave/light spectrum is their frequency. For example, radio waves have a very low frequency, microwaves have a slightly higher frequency, then infrared, visible light, ultraviolet, X-rays, gamma rays, etc.
visible light waves
No.