Definition of Reflection

Basic Concept

Reflection: phenomenon where wavefronts encounter boundary and return into original medium. Occurs for light, sound, water waves, and other wave types. Direction change: incident wave reverses at interface.

Boundary Interaction

Interface: surface separating two media with different optical/acoustic properties. Reflection depends on impedance mismatch or refractive index contrast.

Wave Properties Preserved

Frequency: remains constant after reflection. Wavelength and speed may vary depending on medium. Wave energy partially or fully reflected depending on surface.

Laws of Reflection

First Law

Incident ray, reflected ray, and normal lie in same plane.

Second Law

Angle of incidence (θi) equals angle of reflection (θr): θi = θr.

Proof and Implications

Derivable from wavefront construction and Fermat's principle. Ensures predictable reflection paths enabling optical devices design.

Types of Reflection

Specular Reflection

Reflection from smooth surfaces. Parallel incident rays reflect as parallel rays. Produces clear images.

Diffuse Reflection

Reflection from rough surfaces. Incident rays scatter in multiple directions. Prevents image formation but enables visibility of objects.

Retroreflection

Reflection where light returns in direction of incidence. Used in road signs, safety gear via corner-cube prisms or cat's eye devices.

Reflection of Different Waves

Light Waves

Reflection governed by refractive index contrast and surface smoothness. Visible light reflects producing images.

Sound Waves

Reflection occurs at impedance mismatch in acoustic media. Basis of echo, sonar, and room acoustics.

Water Waves

Reflect at boundaries like walls or obstacles. Direction changes conform to angle laws analogous to light.

Mirrors and Image Formation

Plane Mirrors

Flat reflective surfaces. Produce virtual, laterally inverted images. Image distance equals object distance behind mirror.

Image Characteristics

Virtual, upright, same size as object, laterally inverted. Used in daily life and optical instruments.

Mirror Equation

Relationship between object distance (do), image distance (di), and focal length (f) for curved mirrors.

Curved Mirrors

Concave Mirrors

Converging mirrors. Reflect rays inward. Can produce real or virtual images depending on object position.

Convex Mirrors

Diverging mirrors. Reflect rays outward. Always produce virtual, diminished, upright images.

Image Formation Rules

Ray diagrams used to locate image. Focal length related to radius of curvature (R): f = R/2.

Total Internal Reflection and Optical Fibers

Total Internal Reflection (TIR)

Occurs when light attempts to move from denser to rarer medium beyond critical angle. Reflection is 100%, no refraction.

Critical Angle

Minimum angle of incidence for TIR: sin θc = n2 / n1 (n1 > n2). Dependent on refractive indices.

Optical Fibers

Use TIR to confine light within core. Enable long-distance, low-loss data transmission in telecommunications and medical imaging.

Applications of Reflection

Mirrors in Optics

Used in telescopes, microscopes, cameras for image formation and light direction control.

Reflective Coatings

Enhance reflectivity of surfaces in lasers, solar concentrators, and architectural glass.

Acoustic Engineering

Reflection principles applied in auditoriums, sonar, noise control.

Mathematical Formulas

Law of Reflection

θi = θrwhere,θi = angle of incidence,θr = angle of reflection.

Mirror Formula

1/f = 1/do + 1/diwhere,f = focal length,do = object distance,di = image distance.

Critical Angle Formula

sin θc = n2 / n1where,θc = critical angle,n1 = refractive index of denser medium,n2 = refractive index of rarer medium (n1 > n2).

Experimental Verification

Plane Mirror Angle Measurement

Set up laser or ray box incident on plane mirror. Measure incident and reflected angles with protractor to verify θi = θr.

Concave Mirror Image Formation

Place object at various distances from concave mirror. Observe image position, size, orientation to confirm mirror equation.

Optical Fiber Demonstration

Direct light into fiber at angle exceeding critical angle. Observe light transmission via total internal reflection.

ExperimentObjectiveKey Observation
Plane mirror angle measurementVerify laws of reflectionθi = θr within measurement error
Concave mirror image formationTest mirror formulaImage position varies with object distance
Optical fiber light transmissionDemonstrate total internal reflectionLight confined within fiber core

Reflection vs Refraction

Reflection

Wave reverses direction at boundary. Energy reflected back into original medium. Governed by law of reflection.

Refraction

Wave passes into second medium with change in speed and direction. Governed by Snell's law: n1 sin θ1 = n2 sin θ2.

Boundary Behavior

Reflection and refraction occur simultaneously. Proportions depend on media properties and angle of incidence.

Common Misconceptions

Reflection Changes Frequency

False: frequency remains constant during reflection. Only direction and phase may change.

All Surfaces Produce Clear Images

False: only smooth surfaces cause specular reflection and clear images. Rough surfaces cause diffuse reflection.

Total Internal Reflection in Air

False: TIR requires denser to rarer medium transition. Air to glass does not produce TIR; glass to air can.

References

  • Hecht, E., "Optics," 5th Ed., Pearson, 2016, pp. 45-112.
  • Born, M. & Wolf, E., "Principles of Optics," 7th Ed., Cambridge Univ. Press, 1999, pp. 78-130.
  • Serway, R.A. & Jewett, J.W., "Physics for Scientists and Engineers," 9th Ed., Brooks/Cole, 2013, pp. 1015-1040.
  • Pedrotti, F.L., Pedrotti, L.M., & Pedrotti, L.S., "Introduction to Optics," 3rd Ed., Pearson, 2006, pp. 56-95.
  • Saleh, B.E.A. & Teich, M.C., "Fundamentals of Photonics," 2nd Ed., Wiley, 2007, pp. 270-315.