logo
Optics_book

Laws of reflection:

  1. Angle of reflection equals to angle of incidence.

  2. Incident and reflected rays lie in the same plane.

  3. Incident and reflected rays are on opposite sides of the normal - a line perpendicular to the reflecting surface and passing through the point of incidence.

Refraction is the bending of a light ray when it crosses the boundary between two different materials, as from air into water. This change in direction is due to a change in speed. Light travels faster in empty space and slows down upon entering matter. Its speed in air is almost the same as its speed in space, but it travels only 3/4 as fast in water and only 2/3 as fast in glass. The refractive index of a substance is the ratio of the speed of light in space (or in air) to its speed in the substance. This ratio is always greater than one.

When a beam of light enters a plane of glass perpendicular to the surface, it slows down, and its wavelength in the glass becomes shorter in the same proportion. The frequency remains the same. Coming out of the glass, the light speeds up again, the wavelength returning to its former size.

When a light ray strikes the glass at some other angle, it changes direction as well as speed. Inside the glass, the ray bends toward the perpendicular or normal. If the two sides of the glass are parallel, the light will return to its original direction when it leaves the glass, even though it has been displaced in its passage. If the two sides of the glass are not parallel, as in the case of a prism or a lens, the ray emerges in a new direction.