what is Tyndall effect
Answers
Tyndall effect, also called Tyndall phenomenon, scattering of a beam of light by a medium containing small suspended particles—e.g., smoke or dust in a room, which makes visible a light beam entering a window.
The Tyndall effect is a phenomenon in which light is scattered by fine particles, like water drops, dust particles, and molecules of air. The Tyndall effect is named after John Tyndall, the Irish physicist who first discovered it. The phenomenon occurs when a beam of light passes through colloidal/fine particles, scattering the light and making the particles as well as the path of the light beam visible.
The color and density of scattered light depends on the size and weight of the scattering particles as well as the frequency of the beam of light.
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