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Question

A group of students took an old shoe box and covered it with a black paper from all sides. They fixed a source of light (a torch) at one end of the box by making a hole in it and made another hole on the other side to view the light. They placed a milk sample contained in a beaker/tumbler in the box as shown in the Fig.2.4. They were amazed to see that milk taken in the tumbler was illuminated. They tried the same activity by taking a salt solution but found that light simply passed through it?
Can you suggest two more solutions which would show the same effect as shown by the milk solution?
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Solution

Salt solution is a true solution and shows no scattering of light while milk is a colloid and when light is scattered from the particles of colloids it is illuminated and it is because of Tyndall effect. In the Tyndall effect light is scattered by particles in a colloid or particles in a fine suspension while showing no light in a true solution.It is used to determine whether a mixture is true or colloidal. Other examples of colloidal solution similar to milk is soap solution and fog which are colloids.

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