the light ray turns into a rainbow like ray
the ray of light will be reflected at an angle
The colour reflected is red.
If you shone monochromatic light on a diffraction grating it would alternate bright and dark bands. Only white light white light shone through a diffraction grating would produce a band of colors.
No. I shone a light in the room.
No, the word 'shone' is a verb; the past tense of the verb to shine.Example: A single light shone in the distance.The word 'shine' is both a noun (shine, shines) and a verb (shine, shines, shining, shined or shone).
the answer is that i dont know you fool
it will make a rainbow on the wall
you see yourself and realize what an idiot you are for even thinking of this question
The white light splits into a spectrum.the original colors will appear. This is referred as REFRACTION.
It all depends on the angle if incidence. In general the light will refract i.e. bend through the glass and come out at the other end. Also, the speed of light will vary through the glass.
the answer is that i dont know you fool
The light is deviated from a straight line or "bends" towards the normal on entering the glass and then away from the normal on leaving the glass. At certain angles the light undergoes dispersion - so that different wavelengths are deviated at different angles - and colours are separated - pure white light will separate into the spectrum.
the ray of light will be reflected at an angle
when the ray is shone at the prism, refraction occurs and the light will split into it's original colour.
it will reflect off it
Well, quite a lot takes place when light is shone on a piece of glass. This has a lot to do with the surface of the glass (how clean it might be), and also with the structure of the glass itself. The light will tend to scatter off the glass -if the glass itself is reflective, or if there are particles on the surface which are reflective. It will also diffract through the glass, causing the light to bend. This is similar to the way that light diffracts through water, but to a MUCH smaller degree if the glass is uniform, thin, and smooth. The glass may also warm slightly, based on the intensity and angle of the light incident on the glass. There are also several other effects, but I hope that this has covered what you wanted to know.
shone is the past tense of shine.The light shines in my window.The light shone on my bed.