Why is UV light purple?
Answers
Answer:
The visible tail looks "purple" because the "red" receptors in your eye have some sensitivity at the shortest visible wavelengths. The visible leakage from a black light stimulates both "red" and "blue" receptors in your eye, and you perceive purple.
Answer:
The u-v lamp is designed to emit u-v (obviously), but like many lamps, it emits across a range of wavelengths. Some of those are in the u-v, but there is also some emission in the visible as purple light. So you can't see most of the light coming from a u-v lamp, just the accidental bit of purple.
Explanation:
The visible tail looks "purple" because the "red" receptors in your eye have some sensitivity at the shortest visible wavelengths. The visible leakage from a black light stimulates both "red" and "blue" receptors in your eye, and you perceive purple.Purple LEDs are ultraviolet and they can be used to create a blacklight effect. Though you can make a brighter purple by mixing red and blue on an RGB LED, it won't have the same effect as the ultraviolet lights used in counterfeit bill detectors and for revealing security holograms on credit cards and driver licenses