Find angle of incidence given deviation angle

In summary, to find the angle of incidence for a ray of light passing from air into benzene with a deviation angle of 9.5°, one can use Snell's law to get an equation involving the angle of incidence and the refractive index of benzene. This equation can be solved using basic trigonometric identities. Alternatively, one can use the expression sin(A-B) = sinA.cosB - cosA.sinB, which quickly reduces to a tan function, to solve for the angle of incidence.
  • #1
roam
1,271
12

Homework Statement



A ray of light passes from air into benzene. For its deviation angle δ = |θ1 - θ2| to be 9.5°, what must be its angle of incidence? The refractive index of benzene is 1.501.

Homework Equations



Snell's law

The Attempt at a Solution



From Snell's law we have sin θ1 = 1.501 sin θ2. Here θ1 is the angle of incidence. We can rewrite θ2 = θ1 - 9.5 and substitute that into the equation to get

sin θ1 = 1.501 sin (θ1 - 9.5)

But how is it possible to solve for θ1 from this equation? :confused:
 
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  • #2
sin θ = (e-e-iθ)/(2i)

(e-e-iθ)/(2i) = 1.501 (ei(θ-9.5)-e-i(θ-9.5))/(2i)
e-e-iθ = 1.501 (ei(θ-9.5)-e-i(θ-9.5))
e2iθ-e0 = 1.501 (ei(2θ-9.5)-e-i(-9.5))
e2iθ-1 = 1.501 (e2iθe-9.5i-e9.5i)
e2iθ-1.501 e-9.5ie2iθ = 1-1.501 e9.5i
e2iθ (1-1.501 e-9.5i) = 1-1.501 e9.5i
e2iθ = (1-1.501 e9.5i) /(1-1.501 e-9.5i)

e2iθ = (1-1.501 e9.5i) /(1-1.501 cos(9.5) + i 1.501 sin(9.5))
e2iθ = (1-1.501 e9.5i)(1-1.501 cos(9.5) - i 1.501 sin(9.5)) /|1-1.501 cos(9.5) + i 1.501 sin(9.5)|2
e2iθ = (1-1.501 e9.5i)(1-1.501 e9.5i) /|1-1.501 cos(9.5) + i 1.501 sin(9.5)|2

e2iθ = (1-1.501 cos(9.5) - i 1.501 sin(9.5))2 /[(1-1.501 cos 9.5)2+(1.501 sin 9.5)2]
e2iθ = [(1-1.501 cos 9.5)²-(1.501 sin 9.5)² - 2i (1-1.501 cos 9.5)(1.501 sin 9.5)] /[(1-1.501 cos 9.5)²+(1.501 sin 9.5)²]

2iθ = ln|[(1-1.501 cos 9.5)²-(1.501 sin 9.5)² - 2i (1-1.501 cos 9.5)(1.501 sin 9.5)] /[(1-1.501 cos 9.5)²+(1.501 sin 9.5)²]|
+ i arctan [2(1-1.501 cos 9.5)(1.501 sin 9.5)] /[(1-1.501 cos 9.5)²-(1.501 sin 9.5)²]

2iθ = ln|[(1-1.501 cos 9.5)²-(1.501 sin 9.5)² - 2i (1-1.501 cos 9.5)(1.501 sin 9.5)]| - ln[(1-1.501 cos 9.5)²+(1.501 sin 9.5)²]
+ i arctan [2(1-1.501 cos 9.5)(1.501 sin 9.5)] /[(1-1.501 cos 9.5)²-(1.501 sin 9.5)²]

2iθ = ln√{ [(1-1.501 cos 9.5)²-(1.501 sin 9.5)²]²+[2(1-1.501 cos 9.5)(1.501 sin 9.5)]²} - ln[(1-1.501 cos 9.5)²+(1.501 sin 9.5)²]
+ i arctan [2(1-1.501 cos 9.5)(1.501 sin 9.5)] /[(1-1.501 cos 9.5)²-(1.501 sin 9.5)²]

θ = -i/2 ln√{ [(1-1.501 cos 9.5)²-(1.501 sin 9.5)²]²+[2(1-1.501 cos 9.5)(1.501 sin 9.5)]²} +i/2 ln[(1-1.501 cos 9.5)²+(1.501 sin 9.5)²]
+ 1/2 arctan [2(1-1.501 cos 9.5)(1.501 sin 9.5)] /[(1-1.501 cos 9.5)²-(1.501 sin 9.5)²]

θ = i/2 [ln[(1-1.501 cos 9.5)²+(1.501 sin 9.5)²] - ln√{ [(1-1.501 cos 9.5)²-(1.501 sin 9.5)²]²+[2(1-1.501 cos 9.5)(1.501 sin 9.5)]²}]
+ 1/2 arctan [2(1-1.501 cos 9.5)(1.501 sin 9.5)] /[(1-1.501 cos 9.5)²-(1.501 sin 9.5)²]

θ = i/2 ln {[(1-1.501 cos 9.5)²+(1.501 sin 9.5)²]/√[((1-1.501 cos 9.5)²-(1.501 sin 9.5)²)²+(2(1-1.501 cos 9.5)(1.501 sin 9.5))²]}
+ 1/2 arctan [2(1-1.501 cos 9.5)(1.501 sin 9.5)] /[(1-1.501 cos 9.5)²-(1.501 sin 9.5)²]

Please excuse the terrible font. :)
 
Last edited:
  • #3
roam said:

Homework Statement



A ray of light passes from air into benzene. For its deviation angle δ = |θ1 - θ2| to be 9.5°, what must be its angle of incidence? The refractive index of benzene is 1.501.

Homework Equations



Snell's law

The Attempt at a Solution



From Snell's law we have sin θ1 = 1.501 sin θ2. Here θ1 is the angle of incidence. We can rewrite θ2 = θ1 - 9.5 and substitute that into the equation to get

sin θ1 = 1.501 sin (θ1 - 9.5)

But how is it possible to solve for θ1 from this equation? :confused:

You could use the expression sin(A-B) = sinA.cosB - cosA.sinB
 
  • #4
Aren't there an easier and less massy way to solve this question? This was just a 1 mark question in an old exam... I don't think it needs all the tedious trigonometry. Maybe there is a simple method?
 
  • #5
roam said:
Aren't there an easier and less massy way to solve this question? This was just a 1 mark question in an old exam... I don't think it needs all the tedious trigonometry. Maybe there is a simple method?

If the paper is old enough, you would have been using a table of sines rather than a calculator, so you would be able to look at multiple sine values at the same time.

The sin(A-B) method quickly reduces to a Tan function.
 
  • #6
roam said:
Aren't there an easier and less massy way to solve this question? This was just a 1 mark question in an old exam... I don't think it needs all the tedious trigonometry. Maybe there is a simple method?

Strangely I received the message about your calculation, but don't find it in this thread?

In your solution you omitted a bracket, so forgot to multiply sin9.5 by 1.501.

I am pretty sure that if you do that you will get the expected answer.

Note: I hope you were only rounding off values as you typed them in your post, and not before you had finished calculating with them.
 
  • #7
PeterO said:
Strangely I received the message about your calculation, but don't find it in this thread?

In your solution you omitted a bracket, so forgot to multiply sin9.5 by 1.501.

I am pretty sure that if you do that you will get the expected answer.

Note: I hope you were only rounding off values as you typed them in your post, and not before you had finished calculating with them.

Thanks Peter. I had forgotten to multiply everything by 1.501 in that line of my working. Thanks a lot for your help. I got the answer right :)
 

1. What is the relationship between angle of incidence and deviation angle?

The angle of incidence and deviation angle are related by Snell's Law, which states that the angle of incidence is equal to the deviation angle divided by the index of refraction of the medium.

2. How do you calculate the angle of incidence given the deviation angle?

The formula for calculating the angle of incidence is: angle of incidence = deviation angle / index of refraction.

3. What is the index of refraction?

The index of refraction is a measure of how much light bends when it passes through a medium. It is defined as the ratio of the speed of light in a vacuum to the speed of light in the medium.

4. Can the angle of incidence be greater than 90 degrees?

No, the angle of incidence cannot be greater than 90 degrees. This would result in total internal reflection, where all of the light is reflected back into the medium instead of passing through it.

5. How does the angle of incidence affect the path of light?

The angle of incidence determines the amount of bending or refraction that occurs when light passes through a medium. A larger angle of incidence will result in a larger deviation angle, causing the light to change direction more drastically.

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