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Waves
Articles needing additional references from November 2007

Summary Of: Electromagnetic spectrum

The electromagnetic spectrum extends from below the frequencies used for modern radio... the electromagnetic spectrum may be expressed equally well in terms of any of these three quantities... part of the electromagnetic spectrum covers the range from roughly 300 GHz...

Encyclodia Page On: Electromagnetic spectrum

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Although some radiations are marked as N for no in the diagram, some waves do in fact penetrate the atmosphere, although extremely minimally compared to the other radiations | | electromagnetic radiation | kilometres | atom | Planck length | universe | physical cosmology | infinite | continuous | Legend    γ= Gamma raysMIR= Mid infraredHF= High freq.   HX= Hard X-RaysFIR= Far infraredMF= Medium freq.   SX= Soft X-RaysRadio wavesLF= Low freq.   EUV= Extreme ultravioletEHF= Extremely high freq.VLF= Very low freq.   NUV= Near ultravioletSHF= Super high freq.VF/ULF= Voice freq.   Visible lightUHF= Ultra high freq.SLF= Super low freq.   NIR= Near InfraredVHF= Very high freq.ELF= Extremely low freq.     Freq=Frequency | Gamma rays | High freq. | X-Rays | Medium freq. | Radio waves | Low freq. | ultraviolet | Extremely high freq. | Very low freq. | Super high freq. | Voice freq. | Visible light | Ultra high freq. | Super low freq. | Infrared | Very high freq. | Extremely low freq. | wavelengths | atom | Hz | λ | frequency | photon | energy | speed of light | Planck's constant | coiled | radio wave | microwave | infrared | visible region | ultraviolet | X-rays | gamma rays | octaves | Spectroscopy | astrophysics | hydrogen | atoms | emit | radio wave | cm | The electromagnetic spectrum | | nuclear decay | electronic | Fe | Radio frequency | Radio | antennas | resonance | modulation | Television | mobile phones | MRI | wireless networking | amateur radio | frequency allocation | conductor | induces | skin effect | microwave ovens | Microwaves | Plot of Earth's atmospheric transmittance (or opacity) to various wavelengths of electromagnetic radiation. | | super high frequency | SHF | extremely high frequency | EHF | microwaves | waveguides | klystron | magnetron | diodes | Gunn | IMPATT | dipole moment | microwave oven | Wi-Fi | Terahertz radiation | terahertz waves | Infrared radiation | infrared | phonons | "sub-millimetre" in astronomy | black-body | Visible spectrum | Visible Electromagnetic spectrum illustration. | | The light spectrums of different grow lamps | | visible light | sun | stars | human eye is sensitive | rainbow | ultraviolet | wavelength | nm | visual perception | Optical fiber | Ultraviolet | The amount of penetration of UV relative to altitude in Earth's ozone | | ozone | ultraviolet | visible spectrum | Sunburn | skin | cells | skin cancer | DNA | mutagen | ozone layer | X-rays | X-rays | Neutron stars | black holes | X-ray machine | Gamma rays | gamma rays | Paul Ulrich Villard | photons | astronomers | radioisotopes | Compton scattering | resonate | chemical bonds | | Electronics portal | Atmospheric window | ozone layer | Bandplan | Electromagnetic spectroscopy | Radiant energy | Spectroscopy | V band | W band | | citations | verification | reliable references | challenged | UC Davis | National Radio Astronomy Observatory | 2008 | 01-05 | doi | Wikimedia Commons | Department of Commerce | Industry Canada | Ofcom | Radiocommunications Agency | v | d | Gamma rays | X-rays | Ultraviolet | Visible | Infrared | Terahertz radiation | Microwave | Radio | Visible (optical) | Violet | Blue | Green | Yellow | Orange | Red | Microwaves | W band | V band | Q band | Ka band | K band | Ku band | X band | S band | C band | L band | Radio | EHF | SHF | UHF | VHF | HF | MF | LF | VLF | ULF | SLF | ELF | Wavelength types | Microwave | Shortwave | Medium wave | Longwave | Categories | Electromagnetic spectrum | Waves | Articles needing additional references from November 2007 |
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Electromagnetic spectrum".