Physics, asked by ggjvgjjj8185, 1 year ago

Why doesn't refraction occur when looking through a magnifying glass?

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
1
 \textbf {\huge{ \red {ANSWER }}}



The refraction occurs only at the boundary. Once the light has crossed the boundary between the two medium.
Answered by LittleNaughtyBOY
22

 \huge{ \boxed{ \boxed{ \underline{ \mathbb{ \red{ANSWER}}}}}}

Light does get dispersed in a lens (magnifying glass uses a lens); the phenomenon is known as chromatic aberration. That is why it doesnot reflect.

Similar questions