Unit 2: Propagation of Light: Reflection
Unit 2: Propagation of Light: Reflection
Propagation of light refers to the manner in which electromagnetic wave transfers its energy
from one point to another. Light is form of electromagnetic radiation energy that enables us
to see objects around us. When light from an illumination objects falls on the eye, an image is
formed on the retina of the eye from where a message is transmitted to the brain through
optic nerves.
Processes that occur when light passes between boundaries from one medium to another:
reflection, absorption, transmission, refraction and polarization.
Refraction
When light beam travels from one medium to another (of different optical density), its speed
changes. As a result, the ray of light generally bends at the surface separating the two media.
Bending of light when light travels two different mediums is called “refraction”.
When ray of light travels from optically rarer medium to optically denser medium, speed of
light reduces and light bends towards the normal. When ray of light travels from optically
denser medium to optically rarer medium, light bends away from the normal. Eg. For
optically rarer medium- air and eg. For optically denser medium- glass.
Speed of light is maximum for light travelling in vacuum, c= 3*10-8 m/s. Speed of light in
any other medium will be less than 3*10-8 m/s.
Refraction angle depends upon the material of medium on which light is incident. Each
material has refractive index (n), a unitless quantity which governs the extent to which the
refractive medium increases or decreases the speed of light.
speed of light ∈vacuum(c)
absolute refractive index=
speed of light ∈other medium ( v)
Laws of refraction
The incident ray refracted ray, and the normal to the interface of two media at the
point of incidence all lie on the same plane.
The ratio of the sine of the angle of incidence to the sine of the angle of refraction is a
constant. This is also known as Snell’s law of refraction.
Consider three incident rays of light encountering an interface between two media. In this example,
the second medium is the slower medium and the rays are refracted towards the normal - note that
angle A is greater than angle B in the diagram.
Since all rays are perpendicular to their respective wavefronts,
Since all normals are perpendicular to their respective interfaces,
Therefore, and so we can now examine the following new
relationships:
where L is the distance along the interface between points P1 and P2 as shown in the diagram below.
Solving each equation for L yields:
Therefore
If d1 and d2 represent the distances traveled in the respective mediums during the same amount of
time, then we can replace them with the expressions
But v1 and v2 represent the speed of the waves in each medium and can be replaced with the
expressions
where n1 and n2 are the respective indices of refraction and c is the speed of light.
At this junction, we can now write
Canceling the common terms (c and t) yields
Notice that Snell's Law shows that the index of refraction and the sine of the angle of refraction are
inversely proportional - that is, as the refractive index gets larger [n 2 > n1] the sine of the refracted
angle gets smaller [sinθ2 < sinθ1], since the product of the two terms must remain a constant.
Problems:
The light ray moves from a more dense medium to a less dense medium.
The angle of incidence must be greater than the critical angle.
Critical angle:
The incident Angle θ1 that produces an Angle of Refraction of 90 degree is called as Critical
Angle
Snell’s law states the relationship between angles and indices of refraction. It is given by
n1 sin θ1 = n2 sin θ2.
When the incident angle equals the critical angle (θ1 = θc), the angle of refraction is 90º (θ2 =
90º). Noting that sin 90º = 1, Snell’s law in this case becomes
n1 sin θ1 = n2.
θc=sin−1(n2n1)θc=sin−1(n2n1) for n1 > n2.
Total internal reflection occurs for any incident angle greater than the critical angle θc, and it
can only occur when the second medium has an index of refraction less than the first. Note
the above equation is written for a light ray that travels in medium 1 and reflects from
medium 2, as shown in the figure.
Figure 1. (a) A ray of light crosses a boundary where the speed of light increases and the index of
refraction decreases. That is, n2 < n1 . The ray bends away from the perpendicular. (b) The critical angle θc
is the one for which the angle of refraction is. (c) Total internal reflection occurs when the incident angle is
greater than the critical angle.
Polarization
Light is the interaction of electric and magnetic fields travelling through space. The electric
and magnetic vibrations of a light wave occur perpendicularly to each other. The electric field
moves in one direction and magnetic in another though always perpendicularly. So, we have
one plane occupied by an electric field, the magnetic field perpendicular to it, and the
direction of travel which is perpendicular to both. Representation of light constituting of
electric and magnetic field is as shown in figure 5. These electric and magnetic vibrations can
occur in numerous planes. A light wave that is vibrating in more than one plane is known as
unpolarized light. The light emitted by the sun, by a lamp or a tube light are all unpolarised
light sources.
Polarized waves are light waves in which the vibrations occur in a single plane. Plane
polarized light consists of waves in which the direction of vibration is the same for all waves.
The process of transforming unpolarized light into the polarized light is known as
polarization. Representation of unpolarized and polarised light is as shown in figure 6(a) and
6(b).
When an unpolarized light ‘S’ is passed through polarized medium A, plane polarized light is
output. Polarization process is as shown in figure 7.
Figure 7: polarization
Polarization by Transmission
Polarization by Reflection
Polarization by Scattering
Polarization by Refraction