Physics, asked by am901047, 1 year ago

explain the unpolarized light

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
4
When the light wave between two dielectrics is incident on a completely flat interface, which is much greater than the wavelength dimension, the angle between the direction of the angle equal to the absolute value of the reflected wave propagation and normal to the interface I1 (reflection angle) incident wave I (law of reflection). Such reflection is called a mirror. Refracted angle between the direction of wave propagation and the normal range (corner refraction R) incidence angle of Snell's Law I (law related to the refractive index).
Answered by Vishal1234
1
Most sources of light emit UNPOLARIZED light i.e. vibrations take place in randomly oriented directions perpendicular to the travel of the wave.

When light is emitted by a source, it is as a result of electron transitions within the individual atoms of the source. These transitions occur rapidly and each gives rise to a wave for a short time.

SO i think this is enough for u. Hope this helps.. . plzzz thumbs up

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