Physics, asked by shayanakhterarc, 12 days ago

If the ray of light is incident normally i.e angle of incidence is zero, what will happen to the reflected ray ?​

Answers

Answered by ItzBrownKudi
1

Answer:

Complete step by step answer:

In this question, the ray of light incident normally on a surface i.e. angle between normal and incident ray must be zero. ... It means that, when ray incident normally on a refracting surface, refracted ray does not suffer any refraction.

Answered by JayaramJR07
4

Answer:

Here is your answer mate,

Explanation:

Question,

If the ray of light is incident normally i.e angle of incidence is zero, what will happen to the reflected ray ?

Answer,

Points that we should,

  • Angle between normal and incident ray is called angle of incidence

  • Angle between normal and reflected ray is called angle of reflection

  • Angle of incident = Angle of reflection

Given,

  • Incident ray coincides with normal

So, angle of incidence = 0°

Angle of reflection = Angle of incident

= 0°

Angle of reflection = zero degrees

It means, reflected ray bounces back in the same path of incidence ray

Or incident ray moves outwards along the normal

Have a good day ❤️

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