How Light Works
absorption, reflection, refraction and diffraction
In reflection, a light ray strikes a smooth surface, such as a mirror, and bounces off. A reflected ray always comes off the surface of a material at an angle equal to the angle at which the incoming ray hit the surface. In physics, you’ll hear this called the law of reflection. You’ve probably heard this law stated as “the angle of incidence equals the angle of reflection.
Refraction occurs when a ray of light passes from one transparent medium (air, let’s say) to a second transparent medium (water). When this happens, light changes speed and the light ray bends, either toward or away from what we call the normal line, an imaginary straight line that runs perpendicular to the surface of the object.
absorption, reflection, refraction and diffraction
In reflection, a light ray strikes a smooth surface, such as a mirror, and bounces off. A reflected ray always comes off the surface of a material at an angle equal to the angle at which the incoming ray hit the surface. In physics, you’ll hear this called the law of reflection. You’ve probably heard this law stated as “the angle of incidence equals the angle of reflection.
Refraction occurs when a ray of light passes from one transparent medium (air, let’s say) to a second transparent medium (water). When this happens, light changes speed and the light ray bends, either toward or away from what we call the normal line, an imaginary straight line that runs perpendicular to the surface of the object.