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The wavelength of visible light ranges from about 400 to 700 nanometres, several orders of magnitude smaller than radio waves. The gap through which light travels must be extremely small for diffraction to be observed. If light passes through two narrow closely spaced parallel slits, the slight spreading of the light beam from each slit causes the different wavelengths of light to interfere with each other, producing a pattern of light and dark bands. A diffraction grating is a plate of glass or metal ruled with close (some diffraction gratings have from 2,000 to 7,000 lines per inch), equidistant, parallel lines used for separating a wave train such as a beam of incident light into its component frequencies. White light passing through a grating will be separated into its constituent colours. Red light is diffracted more as it has a longer wavelength; blue light is diffracted less as it has a shorter wavelength.
The wavelength of sound is between 0.5 m/1.6 ft and 2.0 m/6.6 ft. When sound waves travel through doorways or between buildings they are diffracted significantly, so that the sound is heard round corners.
The flag uses the pan-Arab colours. The design may have been inspired by the pre-1958 Iraqi flag. Effective date: 24 November 1961.
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