Light
Light is electromagnetic radiation within the portion of the electromagnetic spectrum that is visible to the human eye, corresponding to wavelengths between approximately 380 and 750 nanometers.[1] This narrow band, often spanning from violet (shorter wavelengths) to red (longer wavelengths), enables vision and is produced by various sources such as the sun, incandescent bulbs, and luminescent materials.[2] Light travels through vacuum at a constant speed of exactly 299,792,458 meters per second, a fundamental physical constant that defines the meter in the International System of Units (SI).[3] As a form of energy transfer, light consists of oscillating electric and magnetic fields perpendicular to its direction of propagation, manifesting wave-like properties such as interference and diffraction.[4] Simultaneously, light exhibits particle-like behavior, behaving as discrete packets of energy called photons, each with energy proportional to its frequency, in accordance with quantum mechanics.[5] This wave-particle duality underpins modern physics, explaining phenomena from the photoelectric effect to the behavior in double-slit experiments.[6] Beyond visibility, light's broader electromagnetic context includes ultraviolet and infrared radiation adjacent to the visible spectrum, influencing applications in photography, telecommunications, and medical imaging.[7]Electromagnetic Nature
Electromagnetic Spectrum
Electromagnetic radiation is a form of energy propagated through space as coupled oscillating electric and magnetic fields that are mutually perpendicular to each other and to the direction of propagation.[8] These waves travel at the speed of light in vacuum, c = 3 \times 10^8 m/s, a universal constant for all electromagnetic waves regardless of frequency or wavelength.[3] The electromagnetic spectrum encompasses the full range of these waves, ordered by decreasing wavelength (or increasing frequency), from long-wavelength, low-energy radio waves to short-wavelength, high-energy gamma rays. The spectrum is divided into regions based on wavelength and frequency, each exhibiting distinct interactions with matter. The table below summarizes approximate ranges for the primary components, derived from standard astronomical and physical classifications.[9]| Region | Wavelength Range | Frequency Range (Hz) |
|---|---|---|
| Radio waves | > 1 × 10^{-1} m | < 3 × 10^9 |
| Microwaves | 1 × 10^{-3} to 1 × 10^{-1} m | 3 × 10^9 to 3 × 10^{11} |
| Infrared | 7 × 10^{-7} to 1 × 10^{-3} m | 3 × 10^{11} to 4 × 10^{14} |
| Visible | 4 × 10^{-7} to 7 × 10^{-7} m (400–700 nm) | 4 × 10^{14} to 7.5 × 10^{14} |
| Ultraviolet | 1 × 10^{-8} to 4 × 10^{-7} m | 7.5 × 10^{14} to 3 × 10^{16} |
| X-rays | 1 × 10^{-11} to 1 × 10^{-8} m | 3 × 10^{16} to 3 × 10^{19} |
| Gamma rays | < 1 × 10^{-11} m | > 3 × 10^{19} |