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0 votes
0 answers
35 views

Luneburg lens in a medium

A Luneburg lens is a spherical lens with a gradient refractive index. It has the interesting property that light coming from focal length of infinity will be focused on the surface of the lens. The ...
Xavier's user avatar
  • 284
2 votes
2 answers
135 views

What does the optical Hamiltonian mean?

So I was trying to demonstrate Snell's law with Hamilton's equations, and when I got the Hamiltonian: $$H = -\sqrt{n^2-p_{1}^2-p_{2}^2}.$$ I had a question about what this Hamiltonian indicates. I ...
gordunox's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
25 views

How to Calculate Focal Length when in another medium?

How do you calculate the focal length of a lens when it is placed into another medium, if I only have the focal length of a lens in the air? I understand that the lensmaker's equation should be used, ...
Astrovis's user avatar
  • 187
0 votes
1 answer
45 views

What is a convex-concave lens?

I came across this term while studying for optics, and I'm unsure as to what this means. My thinking is that it might be a meniscus lens, but the text separately give two different models for each ...
Astrovis's user avatar
  • 187
0 votes
0 answers
32 views

Behaviour of light in non-Newtonian fluids

So if a ray of light is passed through a cuboidal glass tub, and refraction occurs for the first time and if force is applied on the the fluid laterally, the viscosity would vary and so would it's ...
Goutham's user avatar
1 vote
2 answers
72 views

Why total reflection happens at only 1 angle?

The critical angle can be intuitively understood by Snell's law.If the incident medium has a bigger diffraction index than the refracted medium then according to Snell's law the refracted ray will be ...
Root Groves's user avatar
5 votes
4 answers
1k views

How do parallel reflected rays meet to form image at infinity? If they never meet then how is image formed?

In my textbooks it is written that when an object is kept at focus, its image is formed at infinity and is real. But how is this possible because parallel lines never meet and it is necessary for rays ...
Shivam Gogia's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
24 views

Lens maker’s formula from parabolic approximation

I’m attempting to derive the lens maker’s formula for a thin or thick lens using the parabolic approximation. I’m familiar with the other proof using the law of refraction and different angles. The ...
TheorVHP's user avatar
0 votes
2 answers
75 views

Is there a way to calculate the angle between the refracted and reflected rays given the refractive index?

Is there a way to calculate the refracted and reflected rays? I know we use Snell's law to calculate the refracted rays, but is there a formula to calculate the angle of the reflected rays, or does it ...
Astrovis's user avatar
  • 187
2 votes
0 answers
35 views

Apparent position of object in bowl of water

Say you have a bowl of water and you keep an object in it. What would the apparent position of an object inside the bowl from the position of an outside observer? Will the curvature of the spherical ...
Astrovis's user avatar
  • 187
5 votes
1 answer
407 views

Difference between deviation of ray and wavefront

This is a reference to the question posted by Govind Prajapat Refraction of light through a slab of variable refractive index A monochromatic light wave is incident normally on a glass slab of ...
soccerer's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
68 views

Finding the limiting refractive index of a rainbow

Give the limiting refractive index of a rainbow. The raindrops are modelled as spherical droplets, with refractive index $n$, with parallel rays from the Sun incident on it. I have a very limited ...
Developer's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
201 views

Lenses and missing reflection

I am wondering why reflected rays are not considered with lenses. If a ray strikes a surface, another is reflected off that striking point; however, this is not added when studying lenses, only ...
DisD's user avatar
  • 23
1 vote
1 answer
71 views

Snell's Law- Extraordinary ray

I applied the snell's law to find the angle of refraction of the Ordinary and Extraordinary ray. And I got the correct answer 3.51. But I know my approach to the question is wrong because I applied ...
Akshat Shrivastava's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
39 views

Magnification of closely packed thin lenses, or of closely packed lens and mirror

I was taught how to calculate the equivalent foci in both the cases. And since the formulae resemble the simple mirror and lens maker formulae, teacher said that this system is behaving like a single ...
Gautam's user avatar
  • 41
0 votes
1 answer
45 views

As we all know a convex lens doesn't exactly converge all rays parallel to it's axis on a single point. So I want to find one such figure

Writing a differential equation for such a figure is an uncomplicated task. It can be accomplished by using snell's law. But the resulting equation probably isn't solvable. I put it in wolfram alpha ...
Arpan Bajpai's user avatar
10 votes
2 answers
2k views

Is it possible to witness a rainbow while facing the sun?

We know that a rainbow occurs due to the refraction and reflection of light inside raindrops. We also know that inside spherical raindrops total internal reflection is not possible. So some light is ...
Al-Ahsan Abhro's user avatar
2 votes
2 answers
130 views

Do Normal Incidence contradicts the definition of refraction?

Professor told our class that if someone wants to define refraction in words, it can be done as the following, The deviation of light from its path when it passes from one medium to another is called ...
user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
23 views

I need to figure out the length of a crystal to move a light beam [closed]

I need to figure out the length of a crystal to move a light beam shining through it. The height is known, and so is the refractive index of the crystal and its length. What I can't figure out is the ...
100xln2's user avatar
  • 119
2 votes
1 answer
200 views

Use of sign convention two times in ray optics

In this particular derivation of refraction happening at a spherical surface in terms of its radius of curvature , image and object distance and refractive index is done by my book as shown When we ...
Razz's user avatar
  • 441
0 votes
0 answers
66 views

Why is there only one angle of incidence that gives minimum deviation in prism?

On plotting the angle of deviation vs the angle of incidence for a prism, we find that the graph dips only at one point. It is this result that is later used to prove that for minimum deviation to ...
Pumpkin_Star's user avatar
0 votes
2 answers
53 views

How to increase the angle of light (without going from a higher to lower index of refraction)?

I would like a device to spread out/increase the angle of rays in a light source. In other words, I would like to reproduce the behaviour of light traveling from an area of higher to lower index of ...
Tom's user avatar
  • 1
0 votes
0 answers
43 views

Why does the green light change to red in the prism? [duplicate]

I know that white light, upon entering another medium from air/ vacuum, disperses into its constituent colours. Essentially when travelling in the air, all of the constituent colours have the same ...
Golden_Hawk's user avatar
  • 1,064
33 votes
3 answers
3k views

A Rainbow Paradox

I was studying the phenomena of the formation of a rainbow. In my book, the following diagram is given: So, the rays at the red end of the spectrum make a larger angle with the incident ray than the ...
Golden_Hawk's user avatar
  • 1,064
0 votes
1 answer
70 views

Combined reflection and refraction [closed]

Suppose a plane mirror is half-submerged in another medium (say water) and light rays are incident obliquely on mirror at the interface separating two media. My questions - (a)- Will reflected rays ...
Himank 's user avatar
2 votes
2 answers
2k views

Why double rainbows have the orders of the color bands in them inverted?

I did some online search and found the explanation using the following two diagrams. It's not perfectly convincing to me. Or at least it is not clear to me in the following details of the process: ...
user78219's user avatar
8 votes
2 answers
399 views

Can we trap a light ray in a prism (in geometric optics)?

In geometric optics, light rays can enter a (finite) prism of constant refractive index, and bounce off the edges as long as the incident angle is less than the critical angle of the medium. Is there ...
Rd Basha's user avatar
  • 2,141
1 vote
1 answer
85 views

Change in nature of image: Putting a concave mirror in water vs in air

I was wondering if we put a concave mirror in water, what will be the difference in the image formed by it in air vs water? Exception: Here I mean except when rays come from infinity (e.g., sun) ...
Golden_Hawk's user avatar
  • 1,064
1 vote
0 answers
179 views

What causes the distortion of an image when seen through a water droplet?

I'm trying to explain what causes an image to be distorted when seen through a water droplet. Specifically, my example is that of a drop of water on a car window. We can see that the image is reversed,...
Iris De Sloyd's user avatar
8 votes
2 answers
1k views

Fermat's principle and a non-physical conclusion

Fermat's Principle is the statement that a ray will follow a minimum-time path between a point, A, to a point, B. So, if I have a block of material of high refractive index, so that it slows the light ...
StefanH's user avatar
  • 737

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