Thomas Young's double-slit experiment demonstrated that light behaves as waves by producing an interference pattern of light and dark bands. The experiment showed that light passing through two slits produces two wavefronts that constructively and destructively interfere. This established light's wave-particle duality. The interference pattern can be analyzed mathematically using the angles and wavelengths to determine spectral orders and characteristics of the original light. Modern applications like diffraction gratings also apply this wave model.