View Full Version : Light and X Rays
zachcumer
Feb19-08, 07:02 PM
Hey here is the question I have to answer...
What is the principal difference between light and an X-ray?
I thought that X rays have short wavelengths, and light has long?
Thanks
zachcumer
Feb19-08, 07:25 PM
hello?
zachcumer
Feb19-08, 07:35 PM
anyone? hello? anyone there?
cepheid
Feb19-08, 07:38 PM
Yes, visible light and X-rays are BOTH electromagnetic radiation. The only thing that distinguishes them is their wavelength. It's true that the wavelength of X-rays is shorter than that of visible light, but the words "short' and "long" in your answer are pretty meaningless unless you actually quantify the wavelength.
zachcumer
Feb19-08, 07:45 PM
so what I was going to put down was the principal differences are that visible light has longer wavelengths compared to x rays which have shorter wavelengths.
cepheid
Feb19-08, 07:55 PM
That's fine, I was just pointing out that if you write it that way, the question naturally arises: shorter than WHAT? Longer than WHAT?
"Shorter" and "longer" imply a comparison
If you write: "The principal difference is the wavelength of the two types of EM radiation. The wavelength of visible light is longer than the wavelength of an X-ray."
EDIT: Or you could just omit the 4 words "which have shorter wavelengths" from the end of your answer.
Either way, that's a better wording because it makes it clear WHAT the comparison is. However, the answer is still vague. If you actually specified how many orders of magnitude longer the wavelength of visible light was, that would be even better:
The wavelength of visible light is 10^{blah} times longer than the wavelength of x-rays.
Even better would be to explicitly state the wavelengths. Physics is a quantitative science.
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