Electromagnetic Spectrum

Plural:

Electromagnetic Spectrum definition

  1. The electromagnetic spectrum is the full range of all types of electromagnetic radiation, ordered by wavelength or frequency, from the longest waves (radio waves) to the shortest (gamma rays).
  2. It includes all forms of light, both visible and invisible to the human eye, each carrying energy through oscillating electric and magnetic fields.
  3. In physics and visual perception, it represents how energy travels as waves, determining how we see color, heat, and light.

Examples

  • Sunlight contains multiple wavelengths; when passed through a prism, it separates into visible colors (red to violet).
  • X-rays used in medical imaging are part of the electromagnetic spectrum, beyond visible light.
  • Infrared radiation is felt as heat, even though it cannot be seen.

Context

In art and painting, the electromagnetic spectrum is the scientific foundation behind color perception. What we call “color” is a small portion of this spectrum, known as visible light. Understanding this helps artists grasp why colors shift under different lighting conditions, and why light is not just illumination but a physical phenomenon that shapes visual reality.

Core Principles


Derivation

Electromagnetic: from “electric” and “magnetic,” referring to the two interrelated fields that propagate as waves.
Spectrum: from Latin spectrum, meaning “appearance” or “image,” originally used to describe the range of colors produced by light.

See also