The light forms around the prism and one side becomes a bright white light and the other side will become a rainbow lighy
The light bends and it is separated in the different colors of the rainbow.
reflection
Dispersion.
a rainbow
No it dosent
When light passes through an inverted prism, the light rays are refracted in the opposite direction compared to when passing through a regular prism. This causes the light to diverge rather than converge, resulting in a wider dispersal of the light spectrum.
When light passes through a prism, it is refracted slightly and separated into seven individual beams of coloured light - red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo and violet.
When white light passes through a triangular prism, it refracts and gets separated into its component colors. This is known as dispersion, where the different colors of light bend by different amounts due to their different wavelengths. This effect is what creates a rainbow when white light passes through water droplets in the sky.
A prism is a transparent object with flat, polished surfaces that refract (bend) light as it passes through. When white light enters a prism, it is separated into its constituent colors through the process of dispersion, creating a spectrum of colors known as a rainbow.
It shows color.
There is no 'wrong angle' - it either passes through the prism or it doesn't. The blue or violet waves will be the most diffracted.
When white light passes through a prism, it separates into its component colors, revealing that white light is actually made up of a spectrum of colors. This process is called dispersion, and it happens because the different colors of light bend by different amounts as they pass through the prism, causing them to spread out.