light 2 refraction and col
TRANSCRIPT
How does light travel through air?
How does light travel through water?
How do you think light travels through oil?
Experiment1. Draw three glasses of water in your copy,
one empty, one filled with water and one filled with oil.
2. Put a pencil in your glass while it is empty and draw what you see when looking straight on.
3. Put water in your glass and look again. Draw what the pencil looks like now.
4. Add oil to the top of the water and draw how the pencil now looks.
A glass with water and oil
Light bends more when passing through oil than it does passing through water!
Colour!
White light is not a single colour; it is made up of a mixture of the seven colours of the rainbow.
We can demonstrate this by splitting white light with a prism: The colours in the white all bend in different directions and break up so we can see them easier!
Seeing colourThe colour an object appears depends on the colours
of light it reflects.
For example, a red book only reflects red light:
White
light
Only red light is reflected
A white hat would reflect all seven colours:
A pair of purple trousers would reflect purple light (and red and blue, as purple is made up of red and blue):
Purple light
White
light
BUT!!!When mixing coloured light, we
get different colours altogether!!
When mixing paint colours we mix blue and red and make purple, yellow and red make orange and yellow and blue make green.
Experiment Time!
Attach one colour to the light. Then shine your new ‘coloured bulb’ through a coloured filter and see what colour you make when you mix the colours!
???
Adding coloursWhite light can be split up to make separate colours.
These colours can be added together again.
The primary colours of light are red, blue and green:
Adding blue and red makes magenta (purple)
Adding blue and green makes cyan
(light blue)
Adding all three makes white again
Adding red and green makes yellow