answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

Visible light is defined from wavelengths around 380nm to 780nm. Wavelengths smaller than 380nm are called ultraviolet and wavelengths larger than 780nm are called infrared. Based on those two names, you can probably guess how the visible spectrum is broken up.

Specifically (in nanometers):

Violet is 380-45

Blue is 450-495

green is 495-570

yellow is 570-590

orange is 590-620

red is 620-780

What is special about these wavelengths is that our eyes are optimized for them. We have what are called cones and rods inside our eyes (about 6 to 7 million cones and 75 to 100 million rods in each eye). These cones and rods are mini sensors, taking in the photons. Depending on the photon, they will affect different cones and different rods.

The cones can be broken up further into blue, green and red. The cones are responsible for everything we see as color. The blue cones pick up wavelengths from 380-500, but they are most sensitive around 430nm. The green cones are even more sensitive than blue ones; they pick up wavelengths from 450 to 630nm. This cone is most sensitive around 540nm. The final cone, the red cone, goes from 500nm to 700nm, peaking at around 580nm.

This may seem like a lot of data, but what it is telling us is that we don't have any cones for wavelengths outside of these ranges. So we defined the the wavelengths of the EM spectrum as visible light only because we can see those wavelengths.

Birds on the other hand, have four cones, the fourth being optimized for ultraviolet light. This kind of brings into question, what does blue/green/red even mean? That is a difficult question to answer because there is no inherent 'blueness' to light, its just how our brain interprets the signals for blue/green/red. We wouldn't know how to describe what birds see at all, because what they see has never been seen by people before.

That isn't to say we cant utilize the other spectrums. We use x-rays and infrared light all the time. What happens though, say in infrared goggles, is that we make sensors that CAN see those wavelengths, and then we manipulate that incoming wavelength into a wavelength that we can see. So if you have ever seen night vision before, its not that the night looks green, its just a conventional way to show you what you cant possibly see.

User Avatar

Wiki User

15y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar
More answers
User Avatar

Wiki User

12y ago

We humans can respond to a limited part of the electromagnetic spectrum - this we call visible light. We have three sets of cones to detect colours, and their spectral response overlaps, thus we see a continuum of light.

Birds, butterflies and bees have extended colour vision, and some have several more colour sensors than us. For this is more important to them. [is the fruit ripe or poisonous.]

By and large herbivores and omnivores, and carnivores have no colour vision, for they don't need it.

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

14y ago

Short answer:

We don't see them because we can't see them. If we could see them then we would be able to see them and the question is irrelevant.

More detailed answer:

Because seeing is the definition of a process by which a certain range of electromagnetic frequencies strike a portion of any organ called an eye, and set off chemical reactions which create signals along the nervous system; these are interpreted by the brain as sight or vision. The eyes of certain species are developed to detect light in this manner from a certain range; for instance, bees and Spiders can see into the UV range while some snakes can "see" into the infrared. Visible light to them may be invisible to us and vice versa, simply because they have (or have not) developed to see that frequency and we have (or have not) developed to see it as well.

If we could see any other frquency outside this range, then they would be visible as well and would be included in the term "visible light". Thus, we cannot see it simply because we cannot see it, and we can see it simply because we can see it. Those frequencies are not physically seen because they cannot set off a relavent reaction and signal in the eye, hence cannot be received by the brain.

Sound waves are mechanical waves, and so they cannot be seen by definition. Instead, they are heard: a physical process results in the signal being transferred to the brain and processed in a similar way to sight.

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

13y ago

You can see the colors of light with your naked eye, but only after it has been refracted by an object which acts like a prism: rain drops, pieces of glass, soap bubbles, certain atmospheric phenomena, etc.

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

13y ago

Because it's on the other side of the Earth, that being kind of the definition of "night."

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

15y ago

The human eye lacks a tapetum lucidum

This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: Why you can not see the colours of light with your naked eyes?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

Why can't you see infrared light or radiowaves with your naked eyes?

Answer Your brain can't see heat, ultraviolet light, radiowaves, X-Rays, etc. with your naked eyes, because these different kinds of light's wavelengths are either too long or too short for your naked eyes to see. So that is why you can't see infrared


What happens to your eyes when you see sun with your naked eyes?

As intensity of sun light rays are greater so,when we see sun with our naked eyes the sun rays falls on eye lens which is convex which diverges the rays and make it difficult to see


What is also known as the visible spectrum?

The visible spectrum is the light we can see with our own eyes. The colours of the rainbow.


Are there any other colours?

There are colors at both ends of the light spectrum that human eyes can not see.


How do you see black and white?

BlackAll of the colours that make the white light shine down on the black object and all of the colours that make the white light the light absorbs into the object and no light reflects.WhiteAll of the colours that make the white light shine down on the white object and the light and no light is absorbed into the object but all of the colours that make the white light are reflected into your eyes


What are primary colors of light?

This Q&A is about light colours. Paint colours are substances, and different from light colours.If you hold up a glass prism to a beam of sunlight, you'll see the light form a rainbow of colours. This is called the spectrum. It consists of all the colours that make up "white" light.Although you might be able to see seven colours in the spectrum, the white light is really made up of three basic colours. These are called the primary colours because they cannot be made from any other colours. The primary colours of light are red-orange, green, and violet blue. The other colours you see in spectrums or rainbows are made by a mixture of the primary colours.When the naked eye looks at the spectrum, it can see three mixed colours, which are called secondary colours. The secondary colours in light are green-blue, yellow, and magenta-red. You can produce these colours by mixing the primary colours in certain combinations.


Can you see the Milky Way in the night sky with your naked eyes?

You can if you are in an area with little to no light pollution and the moon isn't out.


How does light allow us to see?

Objects absorb light at certain frequencies and reflects light at other frequencies. The reason we see colours is because that is the frequency of light reflected, the reason we see black is because all colours are absorbed....it's nothing. So the reason we see objects is because light is reflected from them, this light then meets our eyes and creates an image.


How does people see colors with there eyes?

everything emits light that we see around us in everyday life. The amount of light it emits determines what 'colour' it appears to be to our eyes. Which is why in pitch black we dont see any colours....no visable light is being reflected off surfaces.


Can you see bacteria with your eyes?

no not with the naked eye


Can we see nerve cell with our naked eyes?

no they are not


Can we see yeast in your naked eyes?

no we can not see them they are micro organism