Snell's Law HELP TEST TOMMOROW

AI Thread Summary
Snell's Law is expressed as n1(sin)theta1 = n2(sin)theta2, and understanding how to manipulate this equation is crucial for solving problems involving the angle of refraction. To find the angle of refraction, one must use the inverse sine function (sin^-1) after isolating sin(theta) in the equation. An example problem illustrates this, where a beam of light transitions from glass to an unknown medium, requiring the calculation of the unknown medium's index of refraction. The discussion emphasizes the importance of applying inverse sine to isolate the angle of refraction. Overall, mastering these concepts is essential for success on the upcoming test.
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Snell's Law HELP! TEST TOMMOROW!

Homework Statement



Hi, I have a problem with Snell's Law...i understand that it is:
n1(sin)theta1 = n2(sin)theta2

but for the test, we need to know how to manipulate the problem to find the angle of refraction...i will have a calculator to plug thing in but i just don't understand how to! Apparently after you find one thing you need to use an inverse sin (sin-1) or something...PLEASE HELP!

An example problem for this is:
A Beam of light passes from glass (n=1.51) to an unknown medium X (nX=?).
If the angle of incidence is 40 and the angle of refraction is 29 then the index of refraction of the unknown medium is closest to:
a)1.17, b)1.38, c)1.63, d)1.83 or e)2.00

Followed by: The beam of light exists medium X and enters air. If it has an incident angle of 29 at the X-Air boundary, find the angle of refranction in the air?



The Attempt at a Solution


for example my notes say: Nw(sin)theta W = Na(sin)theata A
w=water=1.333
a=air=1
1.333(sin)theta W=1 x sin(37)(angle of incidence)
sin thetaW=sin(37)/1.333
Theta W= (sin -1)/(inverse sin) [sin(37)/1.333]

WHY IS IT GO FROM SIN(theta W) TO INVERSE SIN!?

I Know there is a lot fo questions and info here...these are questoins from a quiz i did and i did very poorly...my test is tommorow and help would be greatly appretiated THANKS SOOO MUCH!
 
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To explain the inverse trig function part:

Starting with this line of your example:

sin(theta_w)=(sin37/1.333)

The sin^-1 (or inverse sin, also called arcsin) is just a function that you use to "undo" the sin(theta_w) to get just theta_w. You apply it to both sides of your equation like you would anything else when trying to isolate a variable. So you would have

sin^-1{sin(theta_w)} = sin^-1{sin37/1.333}

the left side then becomes just theta_w, and by calculating the right side you get the angle of refraction.
 
ooooo thanks so much...the test was still REALLY hard but what can you do...thanks a ton i appreatiate it
 
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