wavebands
Wavebands are portions of the electromagnetic spectrum grouped by wavelength. The term is conventional and practical, with boundaries that vary by discipline. The major divisions—radio, microwave, infrared, visible, ultraviolet, X-ray, and gamma—are widely used in science and engineering to describe how electromagnetic radiation is produced, detected, and used.
Radio waves have wavelengths longer than about 1 millimeter and include the bands used for broadcasting and
Atmospheric transparency varies by band: long-wavelength radio and some infrared windows pass through with less attenuation,