Light in our world – Elenco Snap Circuits® Deluxe Sound & Light Combo User Manual

Page 16

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Light in Our World

The Spectrum of Light

The light our eyes see is only part of what is around us. Visible light,

infrared light, radio waves (including TV broadcasting and cell phones),

microwaves, and x-rays are all forms of electromagnetic radiation. They

are actually changing electric and magnetic fields. This radiation travels

like waves in water, spreading out from where it was created. These

waves all travel at the speed of light, but some are longer (higher

wavelength) and some repeat faster (higher frequency). Together they

are called the electromagnetic spectrum:

The visible colors (red, orange, yellow, green, blue, and violet) have

different wavelengths. In the right conditions white light from the sun can

be separated according to wavelength, producing a rainbow of color. This

happens with an actual rainbow, and with prismatic film.
Why is the sky blue? Some sunlight is scattered by tiny particles in the

earth’s atmosphere. The shorter wavelength blue light is scattered more

than the other colors, so the sky appears blue. At sunrise or sunset,

longer wavelength

colors like red or

yellow are more

visible in the sky,

because

sunlight

passes through more

of the atmosphere

before reaching your

eyes. In space, the

sky always appears

black because there

is no atmosphere or

scattering effect.

Infrared

Infrared light is invisible light given off by

anything warm. Infrared is used in remote

controls to control TVs and appliances.

Infrared is invisible, so it doesn’t disrupt

your view of the TV. Infrared doesn’t go

through walls, so it doesn’t interfere with

devices in other rooms.
The remote control sends a stream of

infrared light pulses to the TV, encoded with

the desired commands. The infrared light is

created using an infrared light emitting

diode (LED). Infrared detectors convert the

received light to electric current, and

decode the commands. The detectors are

tuned to focus on the infrared light, and

ignore visible light. This set contains an

infrared detector (U24), which can be

activated by a TV remote control; see

projects 42 and 43 for examples.
Infrared has other uses such as night vision

devices help to see people and animals in

the dark, by looking at the heat they give off

as infrared light. You probably saw this in

the movies.

Glow-in-the-dark

Some materials can absorb light, store it for a while, and slowly release

it back out. “Glow-in-the-dark” materials can be “charged” by bright light,

then will slowly emit light and “glow” for a while in a dark room. The glow

fan blade in this set has a glow powder mixed in the plastic.

It’s like a slow, delayed reflection of the light.

Sound

Sound, like light, spreads out like waves from where it was made. Sound

is variations in air pressure. You “hear” sound when your ears feel these

air pressure variations. Sound has much longer wavelength than light,

which enables sound to travel around corners. Sound can also be

thought of as a wave of vibration, and can travel through water and solid

objects. Sound travels about 1,000 feet per second in air, and about

5,000 feet per second in water.

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