Yahoo Canada Web Search

Search results

    • Image courtesy of www7b.biglobe.ne.jp

      www7b.biglobe.ne.jp

      • Charged particles—such as electrons and protons—create electromagnetic fields when they move, and these fields transport the type of energy we call electromagnetic radiation, or light.
  1. Firstly the interaction with electric charge and secondly the interaction with magnets. Light does not carry any charge itself, so it does not attract or repel charged particles like electrons. Instead light is an oscillating electric and magnetic field.

    • Light
    • Waves
    • Particles
    • Matter
    • Interactions Between Light and Matter

    Gamma rays, X-rays, ultraviolet light, visible light (the visible rainbow), infrared light, microwaves, and radio waves are all forms of light, also called electromagnetic radiation. Together, they make up the electromagnetic spectrum. (That’s right, the radio waves that carry music from the station to your radio, the microwaves that heat up your f...

    Light behaves like a wave. You are probably familiar with waves: water waves that ripple across a pond, sound waves that vibrate air and ear drums, and seismic (earthquake) waves that cause the ground to shake. These are all mechanical waves—energy that propagates through matter, causing it to move up and down, back and forth, or side to side. Ligh...

    Light also behaves like a particle. A particle of light is called a photon. Each individual photon has a very specific amount of energy (no more, no less), which corresponds to its wavelength. Blue photons carry more energy than red photons. Ultraviolet photons carry more energy than infrared photons. Sometimes photons are described as “packets of ...

    Matter is the scientific catch-all word for stuff—anything that has mass and takes up space. Matter is made of microscopic particles called atoms. Atoms are made of even smaller, or subatomic, particles known as protons, neutrons, andelectrons. Atoms can combine to formmolecules. Solids, liquids, and gases are all forms of matter. Planets, stars, n...

    As you may have gathered, light and matter are intricately linked. Matter gives off light. Every object emits, or gives off, light of one sort or another simply because of its temperature. Glowing objects like stars, galaxies, light bulbs, and lava are all sources of visible light. Cooler objects like planets, dust grains, rocks, trees, animals, an...

  2. Dec 7, 2022 · Light part of the electromagnetic spectrum. The radio waves that let us listen to music are on this spectrum as are the infrared waves that let us communicate with our TVs.

  3. Oct 21, 2024 · We have strong reason to conclude that light itself—including radiant heat and other radiation, if any—is an electromagnetic disturbance in the form of waves propagated through the electro-magnetic field according to electro-magnetic laws.

  4. Dec 13, 2023 · Electromagnetic radiation consists of two perpendicular waves, one electric and one magnetic, propagating at the speed of light (c). Electromagnetic radiation is radiant energy that includes radio waves, microwaves, visible light, x-rays, and gamma rays, which differ in their frequencies and wavelengths.

  5. Wave and particle effects of electromagnetic radiation. Together, wave and particle effects fully explain the emission and absorption spectra of EM radiation. The matter-composition of the medium through which the light travels determines the nature of the absorption and emission spectrum.

  6. Aug 10, 2016 · Light waves across the electromagnetic spectrum behave in similar ways. When a light wave encounters an object, they are either transmitted, reflected, absorbed, refracted, polarized, diffracted, or scattered depending on the composition of the object and the wavelength of the light.

  1. People also search for