What colors are in the sun's rays?
Sunlight is a mixture of wavelength so is effectively white.
Sunlight starts out as high energy gamma rays produced by fusion reactions in the core.
It takes a photon many thousands of years to get from the core to the Sun's surface. It gets absorbed and re-emitted many times. It becomes lower in frequency in the process.
Light leaving the Sun's surface covers much of the spectrum. Much of it is infrared, visible: red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, violet and ultraviolet.
The sunlight we see is a mixture of all of the colours and is white light.
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The colors in the sun's rays are red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet, which together form the spectrum of visible light.
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When evaluating a one-sided limit, you need to be careful when a quantity is approaching zero since its sign is different depending on which way it is approaching zero from. Let us look at some examples.
When evaluating a one-sided limit, you need to be careful when a quantity is approaching zero since its sign is different depending on which way it is approaching zero from. Let us look at some examples.
When evaluating a one-sided limit, you need to be careful when a quantity is approaching zero since its sign is different depending on which way it is approaching zero from. Let us look at some examples.
When evaluating a one-sided limit, you need to be careful when a quantity is approaching zero since its sign is different depending on which way it is approaching zero from. Let us look at some examples.

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