Ultraviolet light is not visible. Many ultraviolet lamps also emit some visible light along with the ultraviolet, typically visible violet. Also, ultraviolet light is an ionizing radiation, and will cause some flourescent materials to emit various visible wavelengths of light.
There are plenty, depending on how accurate and detailed you want to get, and how much you are willing to pay. For the simplest, search for UV detector, UV sensor, ultraviolet sensor etc. A photodiode with suitable filtering would probably be the simplest and cheapest.
You get out in the sun. Sun light includes UV radiation.
Additional answer
Your questions asks how do you get UV radiation. You can get it from the Sun or from special UV emitters made for the purpose.
Exciplex lasers also emit ultraviolet radiation.
UV rays are detected by UV scanner. They have been invented.
The UV rays can be detected using various instruments. Spectroscopy is the procedure of detection UV.
With a ultraviolet light detector.
Light waves that are of slightly higher frequency than you can see.
No you cannot. An example of those waves would be those released by the sun and you cannot see those.
There are no such things as "ultraviolet waves" or "homans".
You may experience sunburned skin if you allow your skin to be exposed to the ultraviolet waves that penetrate the clouds on a cloudy day. Ultraviolet waves are at the opposite end of the visible light spectrum from infrared waves. Ultraviolet (UV) waves are longer than X-rays.
Our eyes are adapted to a certain range of wavelengths; infrared and ultraviolet are those waves that are just outside this range.
Light waves that are of slightly higher frequency than you can see.
crows and mocking birds
No you cannot. An example of those waves would be those released by the sun and you cannot see those.
Ultraviolet waves are smaller than light waves.
Ultraviolet.
Ultraviolet waves are part of the Electromagnetic Spectrum which all travel as transverse waves.
There are no such things as "ultraviolet waves" or "homans".
You cannot see or feel ultraviolet radiation waves.
You may experience sunburned skin if you allow your skin to be exposed to the ultraviolet waves that penetrate the clouds on a cloudy day. Ultraviolet waves are at the opposite end of the visible light spectrum from infrared waves. Ultraviolet (UV) waves are longer than X-rays.
Ultraviolet (UV) light has a higher frequency (and a shorter wavelength and shorter period) than violet light. It is more energetic, too. We can't see UV light as our eyes only see up through violet. The shorter wavelengths of the UV light are something we cannot detect with our eyes. We can see (in order of increasing frequency) red, orange, yellow, green, blue and violet light. The UV light is outside the range of our vision.
Ultraviolet is higher frequency, then visible light, then infrared.
Starting at ultraviolet, longer waves are waves of visible violet light, and shorter waves are X-rays.