dispersion, in wave motion, any phenomenon associated with the propagation of individual waves at velocities that depend on their wavelengths.

Waves of any type can be described by a dispersion relation in which the wave frequency ω is given in terms of the wavenumber k, where k = 2π/λ, where λ is the wavelength. The velocity of a wave is ω/k, and waves in which the velocity ω/k is equal to a constant are nondispersive. Waves for which ω/k depends on the wavelength are thus dispersive.

Ocean waves in deep water, for example, move at speeds proportional to the square root of their wavelengths; these speeds vary from a few meters per second for ripples to hundreds of kilometers per hour for tsunamis. (When ocean waves come closer to land in shallow water, the waves are nondispersive and move at a constant speed equal to the square root of the acceleration due to gravity times the depth of the water.)

Observe how radiation from atomic bombs and nuclear disasters remains a major environmental concern
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radiation: Dispersion

In a vacuum, a wave of light has a defined speed, but in a transparent medium that speed varies inversely with the index of refraction (a measure of the angle by which the direction of a wave is changed as it moves from one medium into another). Any transparent medium—e.g., a glass prism—will cause an incident parallel beam of light to fan out according to the refractive index of the glass for each of the component wavelengths, or colors. This effect also causes rainbows, in which sunlight entering raindrops is spread out into its different wavelengths before it is reflected. This separation of light into colors is called angular dispersion or sometimes chromatic dispersion.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica This article was most recently revised and updated by Erik Gregersen.
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