REFRACTION

in physics, deflection of a wave on passing obliquely from one transparent medium into a second medium in which its speed is different, as the passage of a light ray from air into glass. Other forms of electromagnetic radiation, in addition to light waves, can be refracted, as can sound waves.

The Nature of Refraction

Refraction is commonly explained in terms of the wave theory of light and is based on the fact that light travels with greater velocity in some media than it does in others. When, for example, a ray of light traveling through air strikes the surface of a piece of glass at an oblique angle, one side of the wave front enters the glass before the other and is retarded (since light travels more slowly in glass than in air), while the other side continues to move at its original speed until it too reaches the glass. As a result, the ray bends inside the glass, i.e., the refracted ray lies in a direction closer to the normal (the perpendicular to the boundary of the media) than does the incident ray. A light ray entering a different medium is called the incident ray; after bending, the ray is called the refracted ray. The speed at which a given transparent medium transmits light waves is related to its optical density (not to be confused with mass or weight density). In general, a ray is refracted toward the normal when it passes into a denser medium and away from the normal when it passes into a less dense medium.

The Law of Refraction

The law of refraction relates the angle of incidence (angle between the incident ray and the normal) to the angle of refraction (angle between the refracted ray and the normal). This law, credited to Willebrord Snell, states that the ratio of the sine of the angle of incidence, i, to the sine of the angle of refraction, r, is equal to the ratio of the speed of light in the original medium, vi, to the speed of light in the refracting medium, vr, or sin i/sin r=vi/vr. Snell's law is often stated in terms of the indexes of refraction of the two media rather than the speeds of light in the media. The index of refraction, n, of a transparent medium is a direct measure of its optical density and is equal to the ratio of the speed of light in a vacuum, c, to the speed of light in the medium: n=c/v.

Indexes of refraction are always equal to or greater than 1; for air, n=1.00029; for water, n=1.33. Using indexes of refraction, Snell's law takes the form sin i/sin r=nr/ni, or ni sin i=nr sin r. If the original medium is denser than the refracting medium (ni greater than nr), sin r will be greater than sin i. Thus, there will be some acute angle less than 90° for the incident ray corresponding to an angle of refraction of 90°. This angle of incidence is known as the critical angle. For angles of incidence greater than the critical angle, refraction cannot take place and the incident ray is instead reflected back into the original medium according to the law of reflection (angle of reflection equals angle of incidence). This phenomenon is known as total internal reflection.

Applications of Refraction

Refraction has many applications in optics and technology. A lens uses refraction to form an image of an object for many different purposes, such as magnification. A prism uses refraction to form a spectrum of colors from an incident beam of light. Refraction also plays an important role in the formation of a mirage and other optical illusions.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Refraction  - 2566 results

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...principal light-gathering optic is a lens. REFRACTION. 1 The bending of a ray of light or other...variation of the wave velocity in the medium. REFRACTION, ATOMIC. The product of the specific refraction see refraction, specific of an element...
...des ondes liquides 6958 10917 reflexion et refraction neutroniques 8095 10918 reflectivite 10331...10353 10938 refracteur aplanetique 549 10939 refraction astronomique 673 10940 refraction atmospherique 710 10941 refraction conique...
...disk; for the difference in refraction between the lower limb...shorter by 1/5. The large refraction is connected with a relatively...seem to be associated with refractions in excess of the normal 35...lights is due to terrestrial refraction. In Fig. 5 , an observer...
...Medieval and official Keplerian theories of refraction. For example, refraction toward the normal in denser media in no way...of the incident light; quite the contrary, refraction toward the normal is said to depend directly...
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journal articles on: Refraction  - 436 results

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The Mystery of Color Light ... an Introduction to Light Refraction. by Beverly Verner This lesson for grades 3-6 uses color to illustrate light refraction, thereby using artistic elements as an introduction to a science lesson. Materials...
Refractions of the Third Reich in German and Austrian Film. by Joanne Fox Refractions of the Third Reich in German and Austrian Film. By Chloe Paver. (Oxford, England: Oxford University Press, 2007. Pp. vi, 174. $74.00.) Studies...
...body and the cone of refraction constitutes the image...sight at the cone of refractions vertex. 6.8-9...image formation in refraction from plane, spherical...he should test their refractions, just as in the initial...sizes of the angles of refraction at the convex surface...
...Review of Norgasis Seismic Reflection and Refraction Data by I. Thinon , L. Matias , J...Pichon Sibuet 1981). Using new seismic refraction and reflection data, we here describe...multichannel seismic reflection and refraction data collected during the Norgasis cruise...
...refracts the reflections and refractions of other social forms (e...to obtain the status of a refraction-each object must simultaneously...transformed into an ideological refraction of capital. There is thus...It thereby complements a refraction theory of social form. Discourse...
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magazine articles on: Refraction  - 174 results

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Refraction by Herb Young Hakan Brostrom Quartet Refraction Art of Life AL1041-2 Hakan Brostrom (as,ss) Joey Calderazzo (pno) Martin Sjostedt ( bs) Daniel Fredriksson (dms) Recorded at Stockholm, Sweden, February 27, 2008 Catwalk...
...effect causes the double refraction. The double refraction varies with different items...is caused by the unequal refraction of different wavelengths...Without cross polarization the refractions are barely visible. Also...
...with a characteristic called negative refraction. If water had that property, the underwater...The first demonstration of negative refraction used materials that displayed the effect...in Pasadena has now achieved negative refraction for visible light over a spectrum of...
...polarization--something scientists didnt even suspect until a few years ago. Physicists call the broken-pencil effect refraction. Its how lenses redirect light. When crossing at an oblique angle from air into glass or water, or between any two different...
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newspaper articles on: Refraction  - 67 results

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Real Homes Refractions of a Bright Personality; as She Re-decorates for the Third Time, Ann Jameson Tells Jane Gallagher How the Ideal Colour Palettes...
...GCSE, I;m way out of my depth. ;Refraction,; he suddenly announces. ;For the...connection. I gaze blankly back. ;We use refraction to ensure the Marmite that leaves the...makes sense. Spear fishing. Marmite. Refraction. But this is only the beginning. Marmite...
...Sonic Art GET along to the Lismore Regional Gallery for Ross Manning: Double Refraction, a sonic art exhibition opening tomorrow night at 6pm. Double Refraction is an exhibition made up of refracted light. Mannings exhibition of light will...
...alter the shape of the cornea, in effect, correcting the error of refraction," explained Dr. Vicente O. Santos, Jr., Chairman of FUMC Eye Laser Center. An error of refraction is a grade in laymans term, and it is the one responsible why...
...This is caused mainly by cataracts, 62 percent; errors of refraction, 10.3 percent; glaucoma (diseases of the optic nerve...actually preventable types of blindness such as errors of refraction, cataract, and Phthisis bulbi, resulting from severe disease...
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encyclopedia articles on: Refraction  - 47 results

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REFRACTION in physics, deflection of a wave on passing obliquely from one transparent...light waves, can be refracted, as can sound waves. The Nature of Refraction Refraction is commonly explained in terms of the wave theory of light and is...
...stimulation of ultraviolet light. Pigment and Refraction in Coloration The coloration of an organism...leaves), by optical effects of the refraction of light rays (as in mollusk shells...melanin, in the latter case by the refraction of light due to specific spatial arrangements...
...which rays converge after reflection by a concave mirror or refraction by a convex lens , also known as a real focus. The point...rays appear to diverge after reflection by a convex mirror or refraction by a concave lens is known as a virtual focus. See image...
...polarized to some extent. Light can also be polarized by double refraction . Any transparent substance has the property of refracting...device that separates incident light into two rays by double refraction; the unwanted ray is removed from the beam by reflection...
...strikes at an oblique angle, greater than a certain degree. Up to that degree, refraction (not reflection) takes place, and the greatest angle at which refraction is possible is called the critical angle; if the angle of incidence exceeds this...
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