through the slit. B. Law of reflection Angle of incidence is the angle formed by a ray incident on a surface and a perpendicular to the surface at the point of incidence. Angle of reflection is the angle between the reflected ray and the normal ray. The bean was seen and reflected from 10~40 degrees by 10 degrees interval from left and right. In this case‚ the plane of incidence is made by the incidence ray and reflection ray. The reflected ray is in
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8th physics light reflection refraction eyes defect and dispersion The ray of light which falls on the mirror surface is called incident ray. The point at which the incident ray strikes the mirror is called the point of incidence. The ray of light which is sent back by the mirror is called the reflected ray. The ‘normal’ is a line drawn at right angles to the mirror surface at the point of incidence. The angle between incident ray and normal is called the angle of incidence. The angle between
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NT -1310 Unit 7 Assignments MAX HANEY 11/3/2014 Physical Networking Unit 7 Assignments Exercise 1 – Fiber Optics Definitions 1. Crosstalk – The coupling or transfer of unwanted signals from one pair within a cable to another pair. 2. Waveguides – A structure that guides electromagnetic waves along their length. The core fiber in an optical-fiber cable is an optical waveguide. 3. FTTH – Fiber-to-the-home 4. Simplex – a. A link that can only carry a signal in one direction. b. A fiber-optic cable
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1 Chapter 1 Reflection of Light Reflection of Light Practice 1.1 (p. 5) 1 C 2 C 3 Luminous objects: candle flame‚ lighted (c) lamps and the sun Non-luminous objects: books‚ blackboards and the moon (Or other reasonable answers) 4 (a) Divergent (b) Divergent (c) 5 5 Parallel Angle of incidence = 90 25 = 65 Angle between the incident ray and the (a) reflected ray = 65 + 65 = 130 6 (a) Angle of incidence = 90 30 = 60 (b) (b) (c) Angle of reflection for the final reflected
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This experiment seeks to demonstrate the law of reflection - the angle of incidence is equal to the angle of reflection when measured from the normal. Equipment Single slit raybox with power supply Paper Ruler Protractor Sharp Pencil Plane mirror Support for mirror (e.g. wooden block with a groove in‚ or plasticine) Method Draw a line on the paper. Place the mirror on the line and support it so it does not move. Shine the beam from the raybox towards the mirror. Use the pencil
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Below there are three objects a mirror‚ a glass block and a prism‚ it shows and tells you underneath each of the objects picture a description of what happens when light ray is shone on it. The source of light is a light bulb from a ray box. If a beam of light of one colour is shone through a prism‚ the direction of the beam is changed by the prism. This is because the two faces of the prism through which the light passes are not parallel. If white light is used the prism splits up the light into
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Light Effects Refraction‚ reflection and dispersion are all processes which happen when a ray of light is shone at either a glass block‚ a mirror or a prism. The ray box is the light source. Mirror When the ray box is shone at a mirror the angle of incidence is always a few degrees different to the angle of reflection. For example‚ if you shine a light ray into a mirror at 60* then it will reflect out at about 57*. Glass Block If I shine a light ray into a glass block then the light would
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Introduction---------------------------------------------------------------[1] 2) Film deposition-----------------------------------------------------------[2] 3) Basic principle of x-ray reflectivity-------------------------------------[3] 4) Reflection and refraction at the boundary----------------------------[5] 5) X-ray reflectivity
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| SCIENCE - FORM 2 | | The World Through Our Senses | | SENSORY ORGANS AND THEIR FUNCTIONS 1. Sensory organs are used to detect every changes in the environment. (a) Sensory organs are possessed by human and all animals. (b) Sensory organs allow the body to respond to the stimuli surroundings. Stimuli from the surroundings. Stimuli are changes that happen in the environment. (c) Sensory organs have receptors that receive the stimuli and then‚ send them as impulses to the
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Examining the Refraction of Light in Prisms Questions 1. What is the relationship between the angle of incidence and the angle of refraction? The angle of incidence (formed by the ray of light travelling though air into a slab of rectangular perspex) is not directly proportional to the angle of refraction (angle formed between the ray travelling though perspex and the normal). The graph of the plotted angles of incidence against the angles of refraction is not a straight line and therefore demonstrates
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