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n 1 sin θ 1 = n 2 sin θ 2 .

Here n 1 and n 2 are the indices of refraction for media 1 and 2, and θ 1 and θ 2 are the angles between the rays and the perpendicular in media 1 and 2. The incoming ray is called the incident ray, the outgoing ray is called the refracted ray, and the associated angles are the incident angle and the refracted angle, respectively.

Snell’s experiments showed that the law of refraction is obeyed and that a characteristic index of refraction n could be assigned to a given medium and its value measured. Snell was not aware that the speed of light varied in different media, a key fact used when we derive the law of refraction theoretically using Huygens’s principle in Huygens’s Principle .

Determining the index of refraction

Find the index of refraction for medium 2 in [link] (a), assuming medium 1 is air and given that the incident angle is 30.0 ° and the angle of refraction is 22.0 ° .

Strategy

The index of refraction for air is taken to be 1 in most cases (and up to four significant figures, it is 1.000). Thus, n 1 = 1.00 here. From the given information, θ 1 = 30.0 ° and θ 2 = 22.0 ° . With this information, the only unknown in Snell’s law is n 2 , so we can use Snell’s law to find it.

Solution

From Snell’s law we have

n 1 sin θ 1 = n 2 sin θ 2 n 2 = n 1 sin θ 1 sin θ 2 .

Entering known values,

n 2 = 1.00 sin 30.0 ° sin 22.0 ° = 0.500 0.375 = 1.33 .

Significance

This is the index of refraction for water, and Snell could have determined it by measuring the angles and performing this calculation. He would then have found 1.33 to be the appropriate index of refraction for water in all other situations, such as when a ray passes from water to glass. Today, we can verify that the index of refraction is related to the speed of light in a medium by measuring that speed directly.

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Explore bending of light between two media with different indices of refraction. Use the “Intro” simulation and see how changing from air to water to glass changes the bending angle. Use the protractor tool to measure the angles and see if you can recreate the configuration in [link] . Also by measurement, confirm that the angle of reflection equals the angle of incidence.

A larger change in direction

Suppose that in a situation like that in [link] , light goes from air to diamond and that the incident angle is 30.0 ° . Calculate the angle of refraction θ 2 in the diamond.

Strategy

Again, the index of refraction for air is taken to be n 1 = 1.00 , and we are given θ 1 = 30.0 ° . We can look up the index of refraction for diamond in [link] , finding n 2 = 2.419 . The only unknown in Snell’s law is θ 2 , which we wish to determine.

Solution

Solving Snell’s law for sin θ 2 yields

sin θ 2 = n 1 n 2 sin θ 1 .

Entering known values,

sin θ 2 = 1.00 2.419 sin 30.0 ° = ( 0.413 ) ( 0.500 ) = 0.207 .

The angle is thus

θ 2 = sin −1 ( 0.207 ) = 11.9 ° .

Significance

For the same 30.0 ° angle of incidence, the angle of refraction in diamond is significantly smaller than in water ( 11.9 ° rather than 22.0 ° —see [link] ). This means there is a larger change in direction in diamond. The cause of a large change in direction is a large change in the index of refraction (or speed). In general, the larger the change in speed, the greater the effect on the direction of the ray.

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Check Your Understanding In [link] , the solid with the next highest index of refraction after diamond is zircon. If the diamond in [link] were replaced with a piece of zircon, what would be the new angle of refraction?

15.1 °

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Summary

  • The change of a light ray’s direction when it passes through variations in matter is called refraction.
  • The law of refraction, also called Snell’s law, relates the indices of refraction for two media at an interface to the change in angle of a light ray passing through that interface.

Conceptual questions

Diffusion by reflection from a rough surface is described in this chapter. Light can also be diffused by refraction. Describe how this occurs in a specific situation, such as light interacting with crushed ice.

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Will light change direction toward or away from the perpendicular when it goes from air to water? Water to glass? Glass to air?

“toward” when increasing n (air to water, water to glass); “away” when decreasing n (glass to air)

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Explain why an object in water always appears to be at a depth shallower than it actually is?

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Explain why a person’s legs appear very short when wading in a pool. Justify your explanation with a ray diagram showing the path of rays from the feet to the eye of an observer who is out of the water.

A ray from a leg emerges from water after refraction. The observer in air perceives an apparent location for the source, as if a ray traveled in a straight line. See the dashed ray below.
The figure is illustration of the formation of the image of a leg under water, as seen by a viewer in the air above the water. A ray is shown leaving the leg and refracting at the water air interface. The refracted ray bends away from the normal. Extrapolating the refracted ray back into the water, the extrapolated ray is above the actual ray so that the image of the leg is above the actual leg and the leg appears shorter.

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Explain why an oar that is partially submerged in water appears bent.

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Problems

Unless otherwise specified, for problems 1 through 10, the indices of refraction of glass and water should be taken to be 1.50 and 1.333, respectively.

A light beam in air has an angle of incidence of 35 ° at the surface of a glass plate. What are the angles of reflection and refraction?

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A light beam in air is incident on the surface of a pond, making an angle of 20 ° with respect to the surface. What are the angles of reflection and refraction?

reflection, 70 ° ; refraction, 45 °

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When a light ray crosses from water into glass, it emerges at an angle of 30 ° with respect to the normal of the interface. What is its angle of incidence?

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A pencil flashlight submerged in water sends a light beam toward the surface at an angle of incidence of 30 ° . What is the angle of refraction in air?

42 °

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Light rays from the Sun make a 30 ° angle to the vertical when seen from below the surface of a body of water. At what angle above the horizon is the Sun?

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The path of a light beam in air goes from an angle of incidence of 35 ° to an angle of refraction of 22 ° when it enters a rectangular block of plastic. What is the index of refraction of the plastic?

1.53

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A scuba diver training in a pool looks at his instructor as shown below. What angle does the ray from the instructor’s face make with the perpendicular to the water at the point where the ray enters? The angle between the ray in the water and the perpendicular to the water is 25.0 ° .

A scuba diver and his trainer look at each other. They see each other at the locations given by straight line extrapolations of the rays reaching their eyes. To the trainer, the scuba diver appears less deep than he actually is, and to the diver, the trainer appears higher than he actually is. To the trainer, the scuba diver's feet appear to be at a depth of two point zero meters. The incident ray from the trainer strikes the water surface at a horizontal distance of two point zero meters from the trainer. The diver’s head is a vertical distance of d equal to two point zero meters below the surface of the water.
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(a) Using information in the preceding problem, find the height of the instructor’s head above the water, noting that you will first have to calculate the angle of incidence. (b) Find the apparent depth of the diver’s head below water as seen by the instructor.

a. 2.9 m; b. 1.4 m

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Source:  OpenStax, University physics volume 3. OpenStax CNX. Nov 04, 2016 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col12067/1.4
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