refraction occurs and and the light will spit into its original colours
Joanna Kelling
(Masters degree in Pysics)
(PHd in light)
When a ray of light is shone at a prism, the light ray enters the prism and undergoes refraction, bending towards the normal as it enters the denser medium of the prism. Inside the prism, the light ray can undergo multiple reflections and refractions before exiting the prism at a different angle due to refraction again. This dispersion of light causes the different colors of the spectrum to separate, creating a rainbow effect.
Each frequency takes a slightly different path & the result is a type of rainbow.
its refracting
I don't know
The various frequencies are separated.
when the ray is shone at the prism, refraction occurs and the light will split into it's original colour.
because the prism splits the white light into all colors of visible light
It splits into the colours that make it up, so white light makes a rainbow, and different colours produce different results.
it will make a rainbow on the wall
It depends on the shape of the prism and the angle of incidence. For prism in the shape of an equilateral triangle the white light splits into the colours of the spectrum as red light is slowed down less than blue in glass, so the red light is bent less than the blue
Your mother.
the answer is that i dont know you fool
the light reflects back at you in the direction you shone the ray at
By shining light on other objects.
the answer is that i dont know you fool