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electromagnetic spectrum
(redirected from Light spectrum)

   Also found in: Medical, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.04 sec.

electromagnetic spectrum

Complete range, over all wavelengths and frequencies, of electromagnetic waves. These include (in order of decreasing wavelength) radio and television waves, microwaves, infrared radiation, visible light, ultraviolet light, X-rays, and gamma radiation.

The colour of sunlight is made up of a whole range of colours. A glass prism can be used to split white light into separate colours that are sensitive to the human eye, ranging from red (longer wavelength) to violet (shorter wavelength). The human eye cannot detect electromagnetic radiation outside this range. Some animals, such as bees, are able to detect ultraviolet light.



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The panel also heard about another tool used to stem losses: Multispectral imagery, which photographs crops using other-than-visible parts of the light spectrum, which can show crop losses much more accurately than a loss adjuster making estimations on the ground.
Users save time with a one-step calibration of the full spectrum, and the complete visible light spectrum, 380-950 nm, can be collected in a fraction of a second with a resolution of 2 nm.
So they've devised UV and IR filter coatings that transmit the visible light spectrum but filter out the harmful wavelengths.
 
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