Physics, asked by twinkle1745, 5 months ago

explain in brief the produre to find the lateral shift ​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
5

It is found that the incident ray and the emergent ray are not along the same straight line, but the emergent ray seems to be displaced with respect to the incident ray. This shift in the emergent ray with respect to the incident ray is called lateral shift or lateral displacement.....

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Answered by Chandra1972
1

Explanation:

Lateral shift =tsin(i-r)/cosr =tsecr sin(i-r) where t is the thickness of the material and all other are having standar notation.

ANSWER

Consider a rectangular glass slab PQRS having parallel faces PQ and RS as shown in the figure. A ray of light AB in the air is incident on the glass surface PQ. As the ray AB enters from the air(rarer medium) to glass (denser medium), the ray bends towards the normal and follows the path BC inside the glass slab. At point C, refraction takes place again. As the ray BC goes out from glass(denser medium) to air (rarer medium), the ray bends away from the normal and follows the path CD outside the glass slab. Here, the ray AB is called the incident ray, BC the refracted ray and CD the emergent ray.

Let n

1

and n

3

be the refractive index of air and n

2

the refractive index of glass.

On applying smells law at the surface PQ,

n

1

sinθ

1

=n

2

sinθ

2

For air medium, n

1

=1

∴sinθ

1

=n

2

sinθ

2

......(1)

On applying snells law at the surface RS,

n

2

sinθ

3

=n

3

sinθ

4

For air medium n

3

=1

n

2

sinθ

3

=sinθ

4

......(2)

As θ

3

and θ

2

are alternate angles, we have θ

3

2

Therefore (2) becomes:

n

2

sinθ

2

=sinθ

4

.......(3)

Comparing (1) and (3) we get:

sinθ

1

=sinθ

4

∴θ

1

4

i.e., angle of incidence = angle of emergence

The emergency ray CD is parallel to the incident ray ABEF. However, the emergent ray is linearly displaced by a perpendicular distance CE because of refraction. When a ray of light is refracted from two refracting surfaces, the emergent ray is displaced from the direction of the incident ray. This displacement of the emergent ray from the path of the incident ray is called lateral shift.

Lateral shift depends on

i. The perpendicular distance between the two parallel refracting surfaces.

ii. The angle of incidence.

iii. Refractive index of the medium.

Hope this helps mate ☺️.

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