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Physics · 3.2.5 Dispersion of light · Colour

Dispersion. Split it.

Shine white light through a glass prism and watch it split into the spectrum — red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, violet. Violet bends most because it has the shortest wavelength and the highest refractive index. Try monochromatic light too.

0625 Topic 3.2.5 — Dispersion Spectrum of white light Monochromatic light
White light — splits into a continuous spectrum on the screen. Violet deviates most, red least.

Variables

45
60

Refractive index by colour

Red (n ≈ 1.513)
deviates least
Violet (n ≈ 1.532)
deviates most
Why the colours separate
Glass has a slightly higher refractive index for shorter wavelengths, so violet bends more than red.
A second, inverted prism can recombine the spectrum back into white light.
📋 Method (Cambridge demonstration)
  1. In a darkened room, shine a narrow beam of white light at a triangular glass prism.
  2. The light refracts at both faces and emerges spread into a band of colours on a white screen.
  3. The order from least to most deviated: red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, violet.
  4. Replace the white source with a single colour (monochromatic) — only one deviated beam appears, with no spreading.

Recombination: a second, inverted prism brings the colours back together into white light, showing white light is a mixture of colours.

🎯 Syllabus reference (0625)
  • 3.2.5 Dispersion of light — describe the dispersion of white light by a glass prism; recall the seven colours of the visible spectrum in order; define monochromatic light; explain dispersion in terms of different refractive indices / speeds for different colours (wavelengths).

Ask the lab assistant