Refraction & Snell’s Law* – Light bending in glass/acrylic blocks

Refraction & Snell's Law

Refraction & Snell's Law

Light Bending in Glass/Acrylic Blocks

This simulation demonstrates how light bends when passing from air into a glass or acrylic block (and vice versa). Adjust the angles and materials to observe how refraction follows Snell's Law.

θ₁
θ₂
Incident Angle: 30°
Incident Angle: 30°
Observation:

Light changes direction (refracts) when passing from one medium to another with a different refractive index. The amount of bending depends on the angle of incidence and the materials involved.

Snell's Law of Refraction

The Law:

n₁sinθ₁ = n₂sinθ₂

Where:
n₁ = refractive index of first medium
θ₁ = angle of incidence
n₂ = refractive index of second medium
θ₂ = angle of refraction

Key Concepts:

1. Light bends toward the normal when entering a denser medium (higher refractive index).

2. Light bends away from the normal when entering a less dense medium.

3. The refractive index (n) is a measure of how much a medium slows down light compared to vacuum.

Common Materials:

Air: n ≈ 1.0
Water: n ≈ 1.33
Glass: n ≈ 1.5
Acrylic: n ≈ 1.49
Diamond: n ≈ 2.42

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