“Each colour in a rainbow has unique wavelength”? Can you explain why?
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Each colour in a rainbow has unique wavelength
Explanation:
- Each colour has a different wavelength where red has the longest wavelength, and violet has the shortest wavelength.
- They make white light, when all the waves are seen together. It is described as polychromatic light, as white light is actually made of all of the colours of the rainbow because it contains all wavelengths.
- "The visible spectrum" is the range of wavelengths of light that the human eye can see that includes the colours of the rainbow.
- As a ray of light that is transmitted at a particular level of energy with a particular wavelength, each colour can be explained. The greater energy corresponds with shorter wavelength .
- The range of wavelength for indigo is around 425–450 nm and it's hard for the human eye to distinguish well as usually considered a subset of violet.
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