Physics, asked by Anonymous, 9 months ago

Which one is the correct option.?
Please exlplain it also.​

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Answered by Anonymous
1

Option 1 is the correct answer

At the point of incident ray, refracted beam and the typical to the air-glass interface, all lie in the plane of paper.  

Inside experimental limits, the angle of emergence and angle of incident  are equivalent.  

The rising beam is parallel to the incident beam.  

Emergence beam is horizontally dislodged.  

At the point when the light beam goes from optically rarer medium (air) to optically denser medium (glass), the edge of refraction is not exactly the edge of frequency.  

The refracted edge at the air-glass interface and the occurrence point at the glass-air interface are observed to be equivalent.

Answered by CᴀɴᴅʏCʀᴜsʜ
1

Option 1 is the correct answer

At the point of incident ray, refracted beam and the typical to the air-glass interface, all lie in the plane of paper.  

Inside experimental limits, the angle of emergence and angle of incident  are equivalent.  

The rising beam is parallel to the incident beam.  

Emergence beam is horizontally dislodged.  

At the point when the light beam goes from optically rarer medium (air) to optically denser medium (glass), the edge of refraction is not exactly the edge of frequency.  

The refracted edge at the air-glass interface and the occurrence point at the glass-air interface are observed to be equivalent.

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