Definition and Overview
What is Refraction?
Refraction: change in direction of wave propagation at interface between two media with different wave speeds. Occurs due to velocity alteration of wavefronts. Common in light, sound, water waves.
Phenomenological Description
Incident wave strikes boundary obliquely. Wave speed differs in second medium. Wavefront bends towards or away from normal depending on speed ratio.
Historical Context
Studied since ancient times. Ibn Sahl (10th century) first formulated law of refraction. Willebrord Snellius (1621) derived quantitative relationship now known as Snell's law.
"Refraction is the bending of light by a transparent medium, crucial for understanding optical phenomena." -- Isaac Newton
Physical Principle
Wavefront Behavior
Wavefronts propagate at speed v in medium. At boundary, speed changes abruptly. Part of wavefront enters second medium earlier, causing change in direction.
Huygens' Principle
Each point on wavefront acts as source of secondary spherical waves. Envelope of wavelets forms refracted wavefront. Explains bending quantitatively.
Energy Conservation
Energy flux conserved across interface. Reflection and transmission coefficients determine intensity split. Refraction governs direction of transmitted wave.
Snell's Law
Mathematical Statement
Relationship: n₁ sin θ₁ = n₂ sin θ₂. θ₁: angle of incidence, θ₂: angle of refraction, n₁, n₂: refractive indices.
Derivation from Wavefronts
Geometrical derivation using Huygens' principle. Time taken for wavefront to propagate in each medium equal along interface.
Limitations and Assumptions
Assumes isotropic, homogeneous media. Neglects absorption, dispersion for monochromatic waves under normal conditions.
n₁ sin θ₁ = n₂ sin θ₂ Refractive Index
Definition
Refractive index (n): ratio of speed of light in vacuum (c) to speed in medium (v), n = c/v. Dimensionless quantity.
Physical Meaning
Indicates optical density. Higher n: slower light, greater bending. Varies with wavelength (dispersion).
Typical Values
Air: ~1.0003, Water: 1.33, Glass: 1.5 - 1.9, Diamond: 2.42.
| Material | Refractive Index (n) |
|---|---|
| Air | 1.0003 |
| Water | 1.33 |
| Glass | 1.5 - 1.9 |
| Diamond | 2.42 |
Wave Velocity in Media
Speed of Light
Vacuum speed c = 3 × 10⁸ m/s. Reduced in media by factor of refractive index.
Dependence on Medium
Velocity v = c/n. Influenced by medium’s electric permittivity and magnetic permeability.
Frequency and Wavelength
Frequency (f) constant across boundary. Wavelength (λ) changes: λ = v/f.
v = \frac{c}{n} ; \quad \lambda = \frac{v}{f} = \frac{c}{n f} Critical Angle and Total Internal Reflection
Definition of Critical Angle
Angle of incidence in denser medium beyond which refraction ceases and reflection becomes total.
Condition for Total Internal Reflection (TIR)
Occurs when light passes from higher n to lower n medium and incidence angle > critical angle.
Calculation
Critical angle θc: sin θc = n₂ / n₁ (n₁ > n₂).
\sin \theta_c = \frac{n_2}{n_1} | Medium Pair | Critical Angle (degrees) |
|---|---|
| Water (1.33) to Air (1.00) | 48.6° |
| Glass (1.5) to Air (1.00) | 41.8° |
Dispersion of Light
Wavelength Dependence
Refractive index varies with wavelength: n = n(λ). Causes separation of colors in prisms.
Physical Origin
Interaction of electromagnetic waves with atomic electrons. Resonance frequencies affect refractive index.
Dispersion Relation
Described by Cauchy or Sellmeier equations.
n^2(\lambda) = 1 + \sum \frac{B_i \lambda^2}{\lambda^2 - C_i} Refraction at Curved Surfaces
Lensmaker's Formula
Relates focal length (f) of lens to radii of curvature (R₁, R₂) and refractive index (n).
\frac{1}{f} = (n - 1) \left(\frac{1}{R_1} - \frac{1}{R_2}\right) Image Formation
Refraction bends rays to converge/diverge. Determines image location, magnification.
Sign Conventions
Radii positive if center of curvature on outgoing side. Focal length positive for converging lenses.
Optical Instruments and Refraction
Eyeglasses and Contact Lenses
Correct vision defects by refracting light to focus on retina properly.
Microscopes and Telescopes
Use multiple lenses, prisms. Refraction key to magnification and image clarity.
Prisms and Filters
Disperse light, change direction, or filter wavelengths by controlled refraction.
Applications of Refraction
Fiber Optics
Guides light by TIR. Enables high-speed data transmission over long distances.
Atmospheric Phenomena
Mirages, twinkling stars caused by refractive index gradients in air layers.
Medical Imaging
Endoscopes use refractive lenses and fibers for internal visualization.
Mathematical Derivations
Snell's Law from Fermat's Principle
Light travels path of least time. Minimizing travel time at interface yields Snell’s law.
Derivation of Lensmaker’s Formula
Assumes paraxial rays, spherical surfaces. Combines refraction formulas at two surfaces.
Wave Equation Approach
Solving Maxwell’s equations with boundary conditions yields refracted wave solutions.
Experimental Methods
Measuring Refractive Index
Using refractometers, critical angle measurement, minimum deviation in prisms.
Determining Critical Angle
Incrementally increase angle of incidence until total internal reflection observed.
Dispersion Curves
Measure refractive index at different wavelengths using spectrometers and prisms.
References
- Born, M., Wolf, E. Principles of Optics, 7th ed., Cambridge University Press, 1999, pp. 45-90.
- Hecht, E. Optics, 5th ed., Addison-Wesley, 2016, pp. 120-180.
- Pedrotti, F.L., Pedrotti, L.M. Introduction to Optics, 3rd ed., Pearson, 2007, pp. 200-250.
- Saleh, B.E.A., Teich, M.C. Fundamentals of Photonics, 2nd ed., Wiley-Interscience, 2007, pp. 50-100.
- Smith, W.J. Modern Optical Engineering, 4th ed., McGraw-Hill, 2007, pp. 75-130.