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Revision:Reflection, Refraction, Total internal Reflection
From The Student RoomTSR Wiki > Study Help > Subjects and Revision > Revision Notes > Physics > Reflection, Refraction, Total internal Reflection
Total internal reflectionWaves going from a slower to a faster medium speed up and bend at the boundary, e.g. light going from glass to air. Beyond a certain angle (the critical angle) all the waves bounce back into the glass - they are totally internally reflected.
ReflectionWhen waves reflect, they always do it regularly. Remember
The angle of incidence = the angle of reflection
Rough surfacesEach bit of the surface obeys this law, but the overall effect of the jagged surface is to scatter the light diffusely. The reflected waves head off in all directions, e.g. sunlight on a piece of paper.
Smooth surfacesThese act as mirrors. The rays are reflected uniformly and can form images. They can:
The radiation from all these sources - whether they are part of planet Earth or caused by man - is called our background radiation.
RefractionIf a surface is transparent to waves, some or most of the waves hitting the surface will pass through. The rest get internally reflected. The speed of waves usually changes when they cross a boundary. This also changes their direction. (Imagine a car driving off a smooth, hard road into a muddy field.) The bending follows a regular pattern known as Snell's Law. Most syllabuses don't test this in detail, but check in case yours does. In refraction, the bigger the change in speed, the bigger the change in direction. Spectrum of lightIn a vacuum, light of all colours travels at the same speed. In any transparent medium (e.g. glass), the different colours travel at different speeds, so they bend by different amounts. This is why light is split by a prism. Violet light is the most violently bent.
DiffractionWhen waves meet a gap in a barrier, they carry on through the gap. This may seem obvious, but what happens on the far side of the gap isn't so straightforward. There is never a perfect cut-off between the waves that get through and the non-wavy surroundings. The waves always 'leak' to some extent into the shadow area beyond the gap. This is diffraction - the spreading-out of waves when they go through a gap. The extent of the spreading depends on how the width of the gap' compares to the wavelength of the waves.
Some examples of diffractionWaterWaves spreading into a harbour; narrower gap, wider spread Sound
LightVery short wavelength compared with most everyday gaps - windows, pupil in eye, lens in camera etc. - so there is little obvious diffraction and sharp shadows. Try looking at a bright light through the narrow gap between your fingers and squeezing the gap smaller - strange diffraction patterns appear. RadioLong-wave radio signals are much less affected by buildings, tunnels, etc. than those of short-wave or vhf radio.
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