Refraction of Light on Prisma Applications
Abstract
A prism is a clear object made of glass. Its uses include directing light beams, changing and inverting
shadows, and breaking white light into the colors of the spectrum (rainbow colors). The difference in the
color of the spectrum is caused by the difference in the wavelength and frequency of the constituent rays,
so that in the medium these rays have different refractive indices. Assume that the medium around the prism
is air. This is called the angle of deviation. The angle of deviation is the angle formed by the intersection
of the extended incident light and the extended refracted light leaving the prism. The light beam that comes
to the prism in the direction of ED will be refracted along the line DF and so on out of the prism in the
direction of FG. It is difficult for us to see or mark the red spectrum and the purple spectrum due to the
influence of light from outside the laboratory, so we need a dark enough room to see the spectrum. Difficulty
in determining the direction of the light source so that it coincides with a predetermined normal line, the
light is out of focus (a bit wide).
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