Physics > 7. प्रकाश का अपवर्तन (Refraction of Light)

7.Refraction of Light

Summary: 🔮 Refraction of light– “When Light Changes Its Direction” ✨ 👉 Introduction: Have you ever noticed a pencil appearing bent when partially submerged in water? 😲 This is not magic, bu...

Key Highlights

Key Terms:
1️⃣ Law of Refraction2️⃣ Refractive Index3️⃣ Refraction through Medium

🔮 Refraction of light– “When Light Changes Its Direction” ✨

👉 Introduction: Have you ever noticed a pencil appearing bent when partially submerged in water? 😲 This is not magic, but the effect of Refraction — when light passes from one medium to another, it changes direction. This helps us see the world more clearly. 🌈

1️⃣ Law of Refraction

When light enters a transparent medium from another medium and changes its direction, it is called Refraction. 1️⃣ Incident ray, refracted ray, and normal lie in the same plane. 2️⃣ Snell’s Law: \[ \frac{\sin i}{\sin r} = \text{constant} \] (where i = angle of incidence, r = angle of refraction) Without refraction, lenses, cameras, glasses, telescopes, and human vision would not function.

2️⃣ Refractive Index

Refractive index (n or µ) is the ratio of the speed of light in vacuum to the speed of light in a medium. \[ n = \frac{c}{v} \] or \[ n_{ga} = \frac{V_g}{V_a} \] Where: | Material | n | Material | n | |----------|---|---------|---| | Air | 1.0003 | Crown Glass | 1.52 | | Water | 1.33 | Diamond | 2.42 | | Ice | 1.31 | Ruby | 1.71 | | Alcohol | 1.36 | Sapphire | 1.77 | | Kerosene | 1.44 | Dense Flint Glass | 1.65 | | Benzene | 1.50 | Rock Salt | 1.54 | 🔹 Diamond is the densest medium where light travels slowest. Knowledge of refractive index enables advancements in optical fibers, laser technology, and medical imaging.

3️⃣ Refraction through Medium

Basis for prisms, glasses, and camera lenses.

4️⃣ Spherical Lens

A transparent object that forms an image by refraction is called a Lens. 1️⃣ Convex Lens (Converging Lens) – brings light to a point 2️⃣ Concave Lens (Diverging Lens) – spreads light rays Lenses are essential for vision correction, microscopes, and telescopes.

5️⃣ Image Formation by Lens

🔹 Convex Lens:

| Object Position | Image Position | Nature of Image | |----------------|----------------|----------------| | At Infinity | At F | Real, Inverted, Very Small | | Between Infinity & 2F | Between F & 2F | Real, Inverted, Small | | At 2F | At 2F | Real, Inverted, Same Size | | Between F & 2F | Beyond 2F | Real, Inverted, Large | | At F | At Infinity | Real, Inverted, Large | | Between F & O | Same side of lens | Virtual, Erect, Magnified |

🔹 Concave Lens:

| Object Position | Image Position | Nature of Image | |----------------|----------------|----------------| | At Infinity | At F | Virtual, Erect, Very Small | | Between Infinity & O | Between F & O | Virtual, Erect, Small | Used in glasses, projectors, cameras, and telescopes for visual clarity.

6️⃣ Power of Lens

\[ P = \frac{1}{f} \] Where P = Power of lens, f = Focal length in meters Crucial for correcting vision defects (Myopia, Hypermetropia) and medical optics.

7️⃣ Uses of Lenses

🔹 Concave Lens:

🔹 Convex Lens:

Lenses are vital for optical industry, medical devices, and visual technology.

🏁 Conclusion

Refraction teaches us that changing direction can be the key to clear vision. 🌟 This concept spans from science to economic development — 📈 Indian Optics Industry → Health Technology → Global Vision Economy

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