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Laws of Refraction

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Laws of Refraction

Refraction occurs when a light ray passes from one medium to another, causing it to bend due to a change in speed. The diagram illustrates light entering a glass slab from air.

  • AN is the incident ray in air.
  • NB is the refracted ray inside the glass slab.
  • CD is the normal at the point of incidence N.

At N, the light bends following the laws of refraction.

Light ray entering a glass slab from air

Laws of Refraction:

  1. The incident ray, refracted ray, and the normal at the point of incidence all lie in the same plane.
  2. For a given pair of media (e.g., air and glass), the ratio of the sine of the angle of incidence (i) to the sine of the angle of refraction (r) is constant.

This is mathematically expressed as : `"sin i"/"sin r"` = constant

This principle is known as Snell’s Law, named after Willebrord Snell, who discovered it. Snell’s Law relates the angles of incidence and refraction to the refractive indices of the two media. These laws explain why light bends at boundaries and are fundamental in optical physics, influencing the design of lenses, prisms, and optical instruments.

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