Tyndall effect, scattering of a beam of light by a medium containing small suspended particles—e.g., smoke or dust in a room, which makes visible a light beam entering a window. As in Rayleigh scattering, short-wavelength blue light is scattered more strongly than long-wavelength red light. However, Rayleigh scattering occurs from particles much smaller than the wavelength of light, while the Tyndall effect occurs from particles roughly the same size as the wavelength of light. The effect is named for the 19th-century British physicist John Tyndall, who first studied it extensively.