It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
Originally posted by Slashpepper
I don't have time to really explain this properly, but all EM waves travel at the same speed, trust me on this, they are split in a prism because the different wavelengths are bent by different amounts when interacting with matter. So white light, which is made up of a large number of photons of different colours, can be split into these different parts using a prism. Incidentally, here's a pic of the suns emission spectrum:
Note how the peak intensity is actually green... right in the area our eye is most sensitive too
Originally posted by Mayet
Well that explains why when I look at the sun I get a green ball after a while.
Originally posted by cmdrkeenkid
Originally posted by Mayet
Well that explains why when I look at the sun I get a green ball after a while.
Or that could be your eye frying... NEVER look at the Sun directly without the aide of filters.
Originally posted by Lucid Lunacy
Question: If we could see 100% of the known electromagnetic energy spectrum versus the 2% of "visible light" we currently see, would we still perceive the culmination of all the EM frequencies as white light?
If yes then the color white is even more interesting to me. We cannot fathom what the other frequencies (colors) look like but we can at least find comfort in that fact that white light is a constant.
If that made little sense or was completely uneducted then I apologize.
[edit on 073131p://21u07 by Lucid Lunacy]