When a ray of light is shone at a glass prism, it will refract as it enters the prism, then undergo total internal reflection if the angle of incidence is greater than the critical angle, and finally refract again as it exits the prism. This results in the dispersion of light into its component colors due to differences in the refractive indices for different wavelengths.
When light is shone at a glass prism, the light is refracted (bent) as it enters the prism, then it undergoes dispersion where the different colors of light are separated due to their different wavelengths. Lastly, the light is refracted again as it exits the prism, producing a spectrum of colors known as a rainbow.
When light is shone through a glass prism, the light gets refracted, or bent, at different angles depending on the wavelength of the light. This causes the light to separate into its constituent colors, creating a rainbow spectrum known as a rainbow. This phenomenon is called dispersion, and it occurs because different colors of light travel at slightly different speeds in the prism.
The light will pass straight through the glass block if shone perpendicularly, without getting refracted or bent due to the change in medium.
When a ray of light travels through a prism, it will be refracted, or bent, due to the change in speed of light as it moves from one medium (air) to another (glass). This refraction causes the different colors in the light spectrum to separate, resulting in a rainbow-like effect known as dispersion.
When a ray of light is shone at a glass block, it will refract (bend) as it enters the glass due to the change in the speed of light in the material. The light will then travel through the glass block, possibly reflecting off the surfaces inside, and refract again as it exits the block.
it will make a rainbow on the wall
when the ray is shone at the prism, refraction occurs and the light will split into it's original colour.
When light is shone at a glass prism, the light is refracted (bent) as it enters the prism, then it undergoes dispersion where the different colors of light are separated due to their different wavelengths. Lastly, the light is refracted again as it exits the prism, producing a spectrum of colors known as a rainbow.
When light is shone through a glass prism, the light gets refracted, or bent, at different angles depending on the wavelength of the light. This causes the light to separate into its constituent colors, creating a rainbow spectrum known as a rainbow. This phenomenon is called dispersion, and it occurs because different colors of light travel at slightly different speeds in the prism.
The light will pass straight through the glass block if shone perpendicularly, without getting refracted or bent due to the change in medium.
When a ray of light travels through a prism, it will be refracted, or bent, due to the change in speed of light as it moves from one medium (air) to another (glass). This refraction causes the different colors in the light spectrum to separate, resulting in a rainbow-like effect known as dispersion.
When a ray of light is shone at a glass block, it will refract (bend) as it enters the glass due to the change in the speed of light in the material. The light will then travel through the glass block, possibly reflecting off the surfaces inside, and refract again as it exits the block.
It is the refraction of white light being shone through a glass prism, or a raindrop, that separates the white light into the colours of the rainbow.
When a ray of light is shone into a prism, the light ray refracts (bends) as it enters the prism, then undergoes further refraction as it exits the prism. This results in the separation of the light into its component colors, creating a rainbow-like spectrum.
I don't know
It depends on the shape of the prism and the angle of incidence. For prism in the shape of an equilateral triangle the white light splits into the colours of the spectrum as red light is slowed down less than blue in glass, so the red light is bent less than the blue
When a ray of light is shone onto a prism, the light ray enters the prism and bends or refracts due to the change in speed as it moves from air to the denser prism material. Inside the prism, the ray undergoes total internal reflection at the surfaces, causing it to reflect and refract, creating a spectrum of colors known as dispersion.