Refraction of Light refers to the bending of light rays as they pass from one transparent medium to another due to a change in their speed. This phenomenon occurs because light travels at different speeds in different mediums, causing a change in direction at the boundary between the two mediums.
When a straw is partially submerged in a glass of water, the part of the straw submerged appears to be bent at the water’s surface. This bending is due to the refraction of light as it travels from air to water, causing the light rays to change direction at the air-water boundary.
Snell’s Law is a fundamental principle in optics that describes the relationship between the angles of incidence and refraction when light passes from one medium to another. It quantifies the bending of light as it crosses the boundary between two transparent mediums.
Snell’s Law is mathematically represented as:
\begin{equation} \frac{\sin \theta}{\sin \phi} = \frac{v_1}{v_2} \end{equation}
Where,
θ1 = Angle of incidence
θ2= Angle of refraction
v1= Velocity of light in the first medium
v2 = Velocity of light in the second medium
Material | Refractive Index | Speed of Light (m/s) | Critical Angle (degrees) |
---|---|---|---|
Water | 1.333 | 2.25 x 108 | ~48.8 |
Glass (Crown) | 1.5 | 2.00 x 108 | ~41.1 |
Diamond | 2.42 | 1.24 x 108 | ~24.4 |
Acrylic | 1.49 | 2.02 x 108 | ~42.1 |
Quartz | 1.46 | 2.05 x 108 | ~46.6 |
Total internal reflection occurs when light traveling from a denser medium to a less dense medium is incident at an angle greater than the critical angle, causing all the light to be reflected back into the denser medium instead of refracting.
The critical angle is the angle of incidence at which light passing from a denser medium to a less dense medium experiences total internal reflection.
Telecommunication via optical fiber involves transmitting data using light signals that travel through a thin, transparent fiber made of glass or plastic.
The experiment demonstrates the dispersion of light as it passes through a prism. This dispersion occurs because different colors of light have different wavelengths, causing them to refract by varying degrees. The bending of light and the separation of colors illustrate how prisms and other optical devices can manipulate light and reveal its component colors.
This phenomenon is the basis for understanding rainbows, the behavior of light in various mediums, and the functioning of optical instruments.
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