It seems coolest to our senses as it is furthest from the IR/Red sensed as heat, but in physics it is the hottest part (most energetic) of the visible spectrum. UV is hotter. X-rays are much hotter. Gamma rays are the hottest.
Violet light has the shortest wavelength of the visible spectrum.
Blue and violet light have the shortest wavelengths in the visible light spectrum.
The frequency of red light is lower than the frequency of violet light. This is because red light has a longer wavelength, which corresponds to a lower frequency. This difference in frequency is what causes red light to be more common than violet light in natural light sources.
As stated earlier: Violet light: 380-450 nm Red light: 620-750 nm nm=nanometer=10-9 meter
Violet light refracts more than red light because violet light has a shorter wavelength and higher frequency, causing it to bend more when passing through a medium. This is known as dispersion, where different colors of light are separated due to their different wavelengths.
Purple is the coolest colour because it is the colour of a violet.
Violet light has the shortest wavelength of the visible spectrum.
Violet light (400-450 nm) absorbs yellow and orange wavelengths. This is why violet objects appear to be violet because they reflect violet light and absorb others.
dark violet, light pink, light blue, white
Blue and violet light have the shortest wavelengths in the visible light spectrum.
You can see visible light but not ultra violet light.
'violet clair' is 'light violet' in English.
No, violet light has a higher frequency than green light. Violet light has a shorter wavelength and higher energy compared to green light.
In Violet Light was created on 2002-06-11.
The wavelength of violet light ranges from approximately 380 to 450 nanometers, with the shorter wavelengths corresponding to deeper shades of violet.
When white light shines onto a violet object, the violet part of white light reflects off of the object, causing you to see violet. White light it ROYGBIV, which is the colours of the rainbow (red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet). So white light IS the combination of ALL of these colours.
When white light shines on an opaque violet object, the object absorbs most of the colors in the white light spectrum except violet. The violet light is reflected off the object, making it appear violet to our eyes.