For which incidence angle the ray won't come out of the prism's surface....

AI Thread Summary
A ray of light entering a prism with an index of refraction of n=2 will not exit the surface AB if the incidence angle is such that total internal reflection occurs at the second surface. The calculations indicate that for any incident angle, total internal reflection will occur, preventing light transmission. The discussion clarifies that the prism is an isosceles triangle, but this does not affect the ray's propagation. The mathematical analysis shows that there is no real solution for the exit angle, confirming that light will always reflect internally. Thus, any incident angle on this right-angle prism results in total internal reflection.
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Homework Statement


A ray of light falls on the surface AC of a prism with a straight angle and with two sides equal. For which incidence angle the ray won't come out of the surface AB. The index of refraction for the prism is n=2.

Homework Equations


sina/sinb=n2/n1

The Attempt at a Solution


sinb=1 so sina=n2/n1=1/2 the angle is pi/6 rad. Am I right?
 
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Give us the related picture.
 
blue_leaf77 said:
Give us the related picture.
http://s32.postimg.org/6fsfdz69x/image.png
I am adding: pi/6 rad is the angle of incidence. The first refracted angle is pi/3 rad. sin pi/3/sina=1/2
sin a=1.7. Where am I wrong?
 
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What is the prism apex angle? In the problem statement you said "straight angle", but what does straight mean in this case? Googling this term resulted in a straight angle being equal to 180 degrees.
 
blue_leaf77 said:
What is the prism apex angle? In the problem statement you said "straight angle", but what does straight mean in this case? Googling this term resulted in a straight angle being equal to 180 degrees.
It is pi/2 rad or 90 degrees.
 
Take a look at the picture below,
Prism.png


since you know that exit angle at the last surface is 90 degrees, you should be able to calculate ##\delta##, then ##\epsilon##, afterwards ##\gamma## follows naturally from that upper triangle and so on till you find ##\alpha##.
 
sin sigma/sin 90=1/2=> sin sigma= pi/6 rad. beta=180-90-30=60=pi/3 rad. (as the angle of two extensions is pi/2.
sin alpha/ sin 60=2/1=> sin alpha/sqrt(3)/2=2=> sin aplha=sqrt (3)=1.7. I don't know where I am wrong.
 
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Please fix your comment above.
 
blue_leaf77 said:
Please fix your comment above.
Just did it.
 
  • #10
This potentially means that any incident angle on a right angle prism with ##n=2## will result in a total internal reflection at the second surface and hence no light can be transmitted.
 
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  • #11
blue_leaf77 said:
This potentially means that any incident angle on a right angle prism will result in a total internal reflection at the second surface and hence no light can be transmitted.
What about the two equal sides of the prism. i didn't use this fact anywhere.
 
  • #12
Probably that means the prism is an isosceles triangle but that doesn't influence the propagation of the ray. Anyway you can actually prove the statement I made in post #10. Denote the exit angle out of the second side as ##\eta##. In the second surface, Snell's law gives ##n \sin \delta = \sin \eta##. Then ##\beta = 90^o-\delta## and Snell's law in the first side gives
$$
\begin{aligned}
\sin \alpha &= n \sin\beta = n \sin(90^o-\delta) \\
&= n\cos \delta = n \sqrt{1-\sin^2 \delta}
\end{aligned}
$$
Then by substituting Snell's law from the second side for ##\sin \delta##,
$$
\sin \alpha = n \sqrt{1-\frac{\sin^2 \eta}{n^2}} \\
\sin \alpha = \sqrt{n^2 - \sin^2 \eta}
$$
The maximum value for the left side is unity, while the minimum value for the right side with ##n=2## is ##\sqrt{2^2-1} = \sqrt{3}##. This means, for any incident angle ##0\geq \alpha \geq 90^o##, there is no real solution for the exit angle ##\eta##. Physically, this means that the rays, irrespective of the incident angle, will undergo total internal reflection at the second surface.
 
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