Photonics: Ray Reflection Question

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on a question regarding ray reflection in photonics, specifically comparing two mirrors with different radii of curvature. The reasoning suggests that the second mirror, having a smaller radius, allows light rays from points A and B to reach it more quickly, making the tangent point the maximum time point. However, there is confusion about part B, particularly regarding the concept of ray paths exhibiting a point of inflection, which remains unclear due to the lack of a precise mathematical definition for the mirror's shape. Participants agree that the question's wording is ambiguous and that clarification is needed. Overall, the discussion highlights the complexities of analyzing light behavior in varying mirror geometries.
sergyegi
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The question can be found at this link: http://gyazo.com/ee82873af32d76898ab1c5b9f058a2eb

My reasoning for part A follows as such: Because the radius of curvature is smaller in the second mirror than in the initial elliptical mirror, every point on the second mirror (other than the tangent point) is now closer to A and B. Thus, any light ray originating from A or B and heading towards any of these points will reach the second mirror in less time than in the case of the elliptical mirror. Thus, the tangent point must be the point of maximum time since it is now the furthest point on the second mirror from either A or B. However, I am not really sure about this answer.

As far as part B, I can't seem to wrap my head around it. I can't quite figure out what the question means when it asks about ray paths exhibiting a point of inflection. How can rays exhibit a point of inflection?
 
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I think you reasoning is good and I also agree part B is muddled. The shape of the mirror is not mathematically defined, to begin with. Are those semicircles or ?
 
Thanks for the reply. They are ellipses.
 
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