White light is a collection of all the other colours of light. There is no such thing as "white" light.
Water will allow all colours of light to pass through, but it will absorb small amounts of light at certain wavelengths as it passes through. Water absorbs red light (lower energy waves) more than blue light (higher energy waves). Over short distances in water, the amount of light absorbed will be undetectable, but over larger distances the water will take on a dark blue colour as a result of light being absorbed, with more red light absorbed than blue light. The colour you see is what's left of the light after the water has absorbed some of it.
well, the rainbow obviously has all the colors, but the answer is brown.
One example of dispersion of light in nature is a rainbow, where sunlight is separated into its component colors as it passes through water droplets in the air, creating a beautiful spectrum of colors. This dispersion is caused by the different wavelengths of light being refracted by different amounts as they pass through the water droplets.
Colors in a rainbow are separated based on their different wavelengths. Each color has a unique wavelength, with red having the longest wavelength and violet the shortest. When sunlight passes through water droplets in the atmosphere, the different wavelengths are refracted at slightly different angles, creating the spectrum of colors we see in a rainbow.
True, or more correctly, when the sunlight is refracted through the water droplets.
This is called the (visible) spectrum; and may also be referred to as a rainbow.
A rainbow
Rainbows get their colors from the reflection, refraction, and dispersion of light in water droplets. When sunlight passes through the droplets, the light is separated into its different colors, creating the rainbow effect we see in the sky.
Rainbows occur when sunlight is refracted, or bent, and then reflected off water droplets in the air. The different colors of the rainbow are caused by the different wavelengths of light being separated and dispersed as they pass through the water droplets.
Rainbows form when sunlight is dispersed and refracted by water droplets in the atmosphere. The different colors of the rainbow are a result of the different wavelengths of light being separated as they pass through the water droplets. This dispersion causes the visible spectrum of colors to be displayed in the sky.
the water droplets after the rain remains in the atmosphere. When the sunlight passes through this droplets the white light of the sun splits in to 7 colors this colors forms the rainbow
Visible Spectrum
well, the rainbow obviously has all the colors, but the answer is brown.
You see a rainbow. Sunlight is composed of different colors of light, each with a unique wavelength. When sunlight is refracted through water droplets in the air, the different colors of light separate and create a rainbow pattern, with red on the outer edge and violet on the inner edge.
One example of dispersion of light in nature is a rainbow, where sunlight is separated into its component colors as it passes through water droplets in the air, creating a beautiful spectrum of colors. This dispersion is caused by the different wavelengths of light being refracted by different amounts as they pass through the water droplets.
Two things needed to make a rainbow are sunlight and water droplets in the air. As sunlight passes through the water droplets, it is refracted and dispersed into its different colors, creating the visible spectrum of a rainbow.
The light is broken into its seven colors (colors of the rainbow) and exits the prism at a different angle with the separated colors. It functions in the exact same way water droplets separate light to create an actual rainbow, but with cut glass instead of water.
Three factors involved in seeing a rainbow are sunlight, water droplets in the air (such as rain), and the observer's position relative to the light source and water droplets. When sunlight passes through and is refracted by water droplets in the air, it creates a spectrum of colors that form a rainbow.