In this lesson, learners will demonstrate an understanding of how light is refracted through a prism and dispersed into its constituent colors. They will recognize and represent the phenomena using diagrams, real-life examples (rainbow, fountain), and simple measurements (angle of deviation).
Students will be able to:
Reference: NCERT Book Alignment
The lesson is aligned with the NCERT Grade 10 Science Textbook, Chapter 10: “The Human Eye and the Colourful World”, Section 10.3: Refraction of light through a prism.
By the end of the lesson, students will be able to:
In this session, students will explore how a prism bends light and creates a spectrum of colours. Through activities, demonstrations, and virtual lab simulations, they will connect the scientific concept with real-life observations, such as rainbows after rain or light seen through waterfalls.
| Title | Approximate Duration | Procedure | Reference Material |
|---|---|---|---|
| Engage | 5 | Begin the session by asking: “Why does a rainbow apprear after rain?” | Slides |
| Explore | 10 | Ask: “Think of places you have seen colourful light effects.” | Slides |
| Explain | 10 | The teacher explains the prism structure, the prism angle, and the deviation angle. Then, introducing dispersion with a diagram and the VIBGYOR sequence, the Teacher Shows Newton’s two-prism experiment using a 3D model using VR Lab. | Slides and Virtual Lab |
| Evaluate | 10 | Students will attempt the Self Evaluation task on LMS.
| Virtual Lab |
| Extend | 5 | Ask: “Can two prisms be arranged in such a way that they cancel each other’s dispersion but still produce deviation? Explain with an example.” Explanation: Two prisms can cancel dispersion but still cause deviation. If two identical prisms are placed in opposite directions, the dispersion produced by the first prism is cancelled by the second prism, so white light emerges without forming a spectrum. However, the entire beam still gets deviated because both prisms together bend the light in the same overall direction. | Slides |
In this lesson, students will learn about how light bends (refraction) when it passes through a triangular glass prism and how it splits into seven colors (dispersion). Through demonstrations, ray diagrams, and real-life examples like rainbows, students will explore how prisms change the direction of light and why this concept is important in understanding natural phenomena.
1. Why Study Refraction and Dispersion?
Have you ever wondered why a rainbow appears after rain or light looks colorful when passing through a glass crystal? These fascinating effects are due to refraction and dispersion. We must first learn how light behaves inside a prism to understand rainbows and spectrum formation. For example, Imagine learning about hundreds of plants without organizing them — it would be overwhelming! But if we group them into herbs, shrubs, and trees, it becomes much easier to learn and compare.
2. What is Refraction and Dispersion?
3. Key Components:
4. Process
Example: When sunlight passes through a prism, it splits into VIBGYOR. If a second prism is inverted, these colors recombine into white light (Newton’s experiment).
5. Visual Representation
6. Applications / Why is it Useful?
This is the list of vocabulary terms used throughout the lesson.
Virtual Lab Activity: The Human Eye and the Colorful World | Refraction of light through a prism
Category: Informative
Features:
Step-by-step Procedure for VR Experience
Open the Virtual Lab – Access the simulation link.
Step 1 — What is a Prism
Step 2 — Shape of a Glass Prism
(Use with Image 2: Triangular prism shape)
Step 3 — Dispersion: Making a Spectrum
Step 4 — Recombination with Two Prisms
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