A triangular prism separates the white light into the spectrum (red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo and violet). There is also ultra violet and infra-red but these cannot be seen.
refraction.since white ligth
A diffraction grating separates white light into its component colors by bending and spreading the light waves. This creates a spectrum of colors, similar to a rainbow.
This phenomenon is called dispersion. Light separates into its component colors due to differences in the speed of each color as it passes through a medium, such as a prism or water droplets in the atmosphere, resulting in the visible spectrum of colors being spread out.
When white light passes through a prism, it separates into its component colors, creating a spectrum of colors like red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet.
A diffraction grating does not disperse light into its component colors. However, a prism does. A diffraction grating simply causes light to diffract and display an interference pattern on a screen.
The color of a light bulb does not impact the dispersion of light through a prism. A prism separates white light into its component colors based on the different wavelengths of light, regardless of the color of the light source.
A prism.
A prism separates white light into colors because different colors of light travel at different speeds when passing through the prism. This causes the light to bend at different angles, resulting in the dispersion of light into the various colors of the rainbow based on their wavelengths.
The defraction grating on the scope acts the same is a prism, splitting the light into its color components by disrupting the timing of the parts so they reach our eyes at separate times and resulting in different colors.
When colors pass back through a prism, they recombine back into white light. This is because a prism separates white light into its component colors by bending each color's wavelength at a different angle. As the colors retrace their path through the prism, their wavelengths merge, resulting in white light again.
Component wavelengths are usually present in radio active decay in a form of light, but you could use an electric guitar, using the amp as a transformer of vibrations to electricity to vibration/ lights
We see a spectrum of different colors because different colors correspond to different wavelengths of light. When white light passes through a prism or raindrop, it separates into its component colors due to refraction and dispersion. Each color has a unique wavelength, and this separation creates the rainbow of colors we see.