Question
Which are examples of non-visible light?
Responses
radio waves and ultraviolet light
radio waves and ultraviolet light - no response given
rainbows and X-rays
rainbows and X-rays - no response given
white light from the sun and microwaves
white light from the sun and microwaves - no response given
white light from a lightbulb and rainbows
Responses
radio waves and ultraviolet light
radio waves and ultraviolet light - no response given
rainbows and X-rays
rainbows and X-rays - no response given
white light from the sun and microwaves
white light from the sun and microwaves - no response given
white light from a lightbulb and rainbows
Answers
GPT-4o mini
Examples of non-visible light include:
- **Radio waves and ultraviolet light**: Radio waves are at the long-wavelength end of the electromagnetic spectrum and are not visible to the human eye. Ultraviolet light has shorter wavelengths than visible light and is also not visible to humans.
The other options, such as "rainbows and X-rays," "white light from the sun and microwaves," and "white light from a lightbulb and rainbows," do not accurately represent non-visible light, since rainbows are visible light spectrums and white light contains visible components. X-rays and microwaves are indeed non-visible, but the combinations in the other responses are not correct in relation to non-visible light.
- **Radio waves and ultraviolet light**: Radio waves are at the long-wavelength end of the electromagnetic spectrum and are not visible to the human eye. Ultraviolet light has shorter wavelengths than visible light and is also not visible to humans.
The other options, such as "rainbows and X-rays," "white light from the sun and microwaves," and "white light from a lightbulb and rainbows," do not accurately represent non-visible light, since rainbows are visible light spectrums and white light contains visible components. X-rays and microwaves are indeed non-visible, but the combinations in the other responses are not correct in relation to non-visible light.