You will have to work the surface area of one of the ends and then multiply that with the length.
I'll concentrate on the region 'below', and as soon as the prism appears, I'll get to work on an answer.
Toblerone candy will work.
There's the rectangular prism, the triangular prism, hexagonal prism, pentagonal prism, the cube, and the octagonal prism.
A Triangular Prism A Rectangular Prism An Octogonal Prism (basically 3D Shapes)
No
The top of the periscope has a prism that reflects the light to the observers prism. The object the top prism is pointed at is seen at the bottom one.
it is prism
The periscope has several parts: the ocular lenses, the mirror or prism, inversion/reversion prisms, relay lenses, another mirror or prism, and objective lenses.
Prism is simply one of those issues that is important, that involves knowledgeable help about
Periscopes work by reflecting light, not refracting it. Light enters the top of the periscope and is reflected through 90 degrees by either a plane mirror or a right angled prism (TIR) and travels down the tube where it is reflected again along the eyepiece to the eye.
Periscopes work by reflecting light, not refracting it. Light enters the top of the periscope and is reflected through 90 degrees by either a plane mirror or a right angled prism (TIR) and travels down the tube where it is reflected again along the eyepiece to the eye.
When at periscope depth, they look through the periscope. It is a prism arrangement that allows good vision around the area. It also provided for gauging distances with a built in range finder.
it bounces the light from the mirrors so that the light is bounced into the persons eye
Yes.
The Reflection.
Mirrors have distortion in the images they project while prisms create undistorted images. :D