1.7.1

Refraction at a Plane Surface

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Refractive Index

Light changes speed and bends when it passes from one medium to the next. This is called refraction.

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Change of speed

  • When light passes from one medium to the next, it changes speed.
  • In a vacuum (empty space), light travels at speed c = 3×108m/s.
  • Light travels more slowly in all other materials.
  • The refractive index, n, of a material is the ratio of the speed of light in a vacuum, c, to the speed of light in that material, cs. It is given by:
    • n=ccsn = \frac{c}{c_s}
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Refractive index of air

  • Air contains lots of chemicals and elements such as oxygen and nitrogen.
  • However, the speed of light in air is so close to the speed of light in a vacuum, that we can approximate them to be the same:
    • cair ≈ c
  • Therefore the refractive index of air is approximately 1.

Snell's Law

Snell's law relates refractive indices to the angles of incidence and refraction.

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Equation

  • Snell's law is:
    • n1sinθ1=n2sinθ2n_1 \sin \theta_1 = n_2 \sin \theta_2
  • The ray of light begins in the medium with refractive index n1.
  • θ1 is the angle of incidence.
  • n2 is the refractive index of the medium the light passes into.
  • θ2 is the angle of refraction.
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Direction of bending

  • When light travels from a less optically dense medium to a more optically dense medium, it bends towards the normal.
  • When light travels from a more optically dense medium to a less optically dense medium, it bends away from the normal.
  • The more optically dense a medium is, the slower light travels through it, and therefore the larger its refractive index.

Critical Angle

When light travels from a medium with a high refractive index (more optically dense) to a medium with a low refractive index (less optically dense) at the critical angle, it will be entirely reflected.

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Equation

  • The critical angle, θc occurs when:
    • sinθc=n2n1\sin \theta_c = \frac{n_2}{n_1}
  • Where n1 is the more optically dense material and n2 is the less optically dense material.
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Total internal reflection

  • At angles of incidence larger than or equal to the critical angle, no light is refracted.
  • Instead, all the light is reflected.
  • This is called total internal reflection.

Jump to other topics

1Principles of Science I

1.1Structure & Bonding

1.2Properties of Substances

1.3Cell Structure & Function

1.4Cell Specialisation

1.5Tissue Structure & Function

1.6Working with Waves

1.7Waves in Communication

2Practical Scientific Procedures and Techniques

3Science Investigation Skills

4Principles of Science II

4.1Extracting Elements

4.2Relating Properties to use of Substances

4.3Organic Chemistry

4.4Energy Changes in Industry

4.5The Circulatory System

4.6Ventilation & Gas Exchange

4.7Urinary System

4.8Cell Transport

4.9Thermal Physics

4.10Materials

4.11Fluids

5Contemporary Issues in Science

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