Physics, asked by noobmaster2123, 9 months ago

State two factors due to which the intensity of the refracted ray is less than the incident ray.

Answers

Answered by Arnav799
1

Answer:

Light rays change direction when they reflect off a surface, move from one transparent medium into another, or travel through a medium whose composition is continuously changing. The law of reflection states that, on reflection from a smooth surface, the angle of the reflected ray is equal to the angle of the incident ray. (By convention, all angles in geometrical optics are measured with respect to the normal to the surface—that is, to a line perpendicular to the surface.) The reflected ray is always in the plane defined by the incident ray and the normal to the surface. The law of reflection can be used to understand the images produced by plane and curved mirrors. Unlike mirrors, most natural surfaces are rough on the scale of the wavelength of light, and, as a consequence, parallel incident light rays are reflected in many different directions, or diffusely. Diffuse reflection is responsible for the ability to see most illuminated surfaces from any position—rays reach the eyes after reflecting off every portion of the surface.

Explanation:

Answered by fazaltraders2929
0

Answer:

Reflection angle (ie, reflected ray and reflective surface ... so the intensity of reflection is reduced ... for example, due to refraction of light.

Explanation:

When a ray of light enters the glass prism, it turns twice. ... a glass prism is a transparent object whose two ...

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