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  1. Feb 15, 2013 · There are no waves in the dark for very much the same reason that there’s no surfing (or ocean waves) in Death Valley. Darkness, being an absence of electromagnetic waves (light) has nothing to do any waving.” 2. “Long story short: darkness isn’t a wave itself because it isn’t anything” 1. Hmmmm….

  2. May 28, 2014 · Yes objects do reemit other wavelengths of electromagnetic waves (category of waves that light waves come under). But although we can't see these waves it doesn't mean there is perfect darkness. There are em waves around. Perfect darkness is wen none of these waves are present.

  3. Sep 20, 2022 · Is darkness a wave? Physicist: The very short answer is no: darkness is not a wave. There are no waves in the dark for very much the same reason that there’s no surfing (or ocean waves) in Death Valley. Darkness, being an absence of electromagnetic waves (light) has nothing to do any waving.

  4. When you see something light waves are hitting your cornea. Dark, by definition, is the absence of light. If there's no sound you don't hear it, if there's no smell you don't smell it, if there's no light you don't see it.

  5. Dec 29, 2006 · There is not a "height" of light waves, like an ocean wave. There is an amplitude of the electric and magnetic fields that make up the light wave. This amplitude decreases as you get farther from the source (the light gets dimmer), with the amplitude decreasing linearly with the distance from the source.

  6. This is like asking why we can't hear sound waves. We do, that's the only thing we "hear." We merely interpret it as the sound of the things from which the pressure waves emanated. Same with light -- we see photons (i.e., the photons striking our retina triggers neural signals), nothing more, nothing less.

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  8. Dark matter isn’t simply dark: it’s invisible. Light of all types seems to pass through as though it’s completely transparent. However, dark matter does have mass, which we see by its gravitational influence. Studies of galaxies show stars and gas moving as though there’s a lot more mass than we can see pulling them along.

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