﴾Praise belongs to Allah Who created the heavens and the earth and
appointed darkness and light...﴿
(Quran, 6:1)
We all know that without light a person cannot see his surroundings with the
naked eye. However, the light that we can see is only a very small part of all
light-emitting energy. There are other kinds of light-emitting energy that human
beings cannot perceive, such as infra-red, ultra-violet, x-rays and radio waves.
Human beings are effectively blind to such light waves.
It is interesting, therefore, that the word for "darkness" in the Quran is
always in the plural. The Arabic word, "ththulumat," is used in the plural in 23
verses of the Quran, and never used in the singular. The use of the word
"darkness" in the Quran indicates that in addition to those light waves we can
see, there may also be other kinds.
Only recently did scientists discover why the plural may have been used here.
Wave lengths vary in a form of energy known as electromagnetic radiation. All
the different forms of electromagnetic radiation behave as energy waves in
space. This can be compared to the waves which form when a stone is thrown into
a pond. As the waves on a pond can be of different sizes, so electromagnetic
radiation has different-sized waves.
Stars and other sources of light do not all give off the same kind of emissions.
These different rays are classified according to their wavelengths. The spectrum
of wavelengths is quite wide. There is a 1025 (a billion times a billion times a
billion) difference between gamma rays, with the smallest size wavelength, and
radio waves, which are the largest. Nearly all the rays emitted by the Sun are
squeezed into just one part of this 1025 spectrum.
In order to better understand the colossal dimensions of this figure, it will be
useful to make a comparison. If we wanted to count to 1025, and if we counted
day and night without pause, it would take us 100 million times the age of the
Earth to finish. The different wavelengths in the universe are distributed
within a spectrum of just such a size. 70% of the different wavelengths emitted
by the Sun are limited to a very narrow spectrum between 0.3 microns and 1.5
microns. There are three kinds of light within that band: visible light,
infra-red light and ultraviolet light. Despite occupying a band less than 1 in
1025, the rays known as visible light represent 41% of all the Sun's rays.
As has been discussed, electromagnetic waves perceivable to the human eye are
responsible for only a very small part of the light spectrum. The other regions
represent only darkness for human beings, who are blind to wavelengths outside
that band.1
1. Hussaini, Quran for Astronomy and Earth Exploration from Space, 175-182.