No. Nothing attracts sunlight. Water can, however, refract sunlight.
A rainbow does not refract light. A rainbow is the result of refracted light. Moisture in the air acts a billions of tiny prisms, causing sunlight to refract, or split, into the visible light spectrum of colors.
glass, windows really anything that you can see through.
double concave lens
Light refraction through a diamond is by design -- the design of the cut.
No. Nothing attracts sunlight. Water can, however, refract sunlight.
The tops refract the sunlight. Part of the sunlight is taken in through wires that connect from the base of the solar panel to the top. The wires feed to sun's light through to it's base where it turns it into electricity therefore fuelling the home that has them.
sunlight blocks out S waves in certain regions.
Through cold air
It Is absorbed through sunlight and food or liguids you consume.
yes
A rainbow does not refract light. A rainbow is the result of refracted light. Moisture in the air acts a billions of tiny prisms, causing sunlight to refract, or split, into the visible light spectrum of colors.
well three things happen when light strikes an object Refract Reflect absorb
The sun's rays are scattered by gases in the atmosphere. They also refract through water droplets in the lower atmosphere to create rainbows.
glass, windows really anything that you can see through.
Black. Without air to refract and scatter the sunlight, there is no color at all to the surrounding space.
Only if the phone is translucent. So, for now, no.