Total Internal reflection is Glass Prism Question

AI Thread Summary
Total internal reflection occurs when light travels from a denser medium, like glass, to a less dense medium, such as air. The key conditions for this phenomenon are that the light must be traveling slower in the denser medium and the angle of incidence must be sufficiently large. The confusion arises from misinterpreting the order of the media; in this case, glass is the first medium and air is the second. Therefore, the light is indeed slower in glass, allowing for total internal reflection to occur at the glass-air boundary. Understanding the index of refraction clarifies this concept.
Mohd95
Messages
4
Reaction score
0
Question about Total Internal Reflection?
My textbook says that for total internal reflection to occur 2 conditions need to be met. Light is traveling more slowly in the first medium than the second medium and no.2 is the angle of incidence must be large enough for no refraction to occur.

My question is about the first condition why does total internal reflection occur when a light ray is shined through a Glass Isoceles Right Angle Prism like the one in old submarine periscopes. I mean isn't light traveling from air to glass therefore entering from a less dense medium into a more dense medium meaning light is faster in the first medium than the second medium. I don't understand it

I need a good answer please and I am in Grade 10 so don't make it very complex

Heres the link of the prism I am alking about: http://www.gcse.com/waves/images/periscope.gif

Also Sources would be appreciated. Thank You very much
 
Science news on Phys.org
The first condition is backwards- total internal reflection can occur when light travels from a more dense to a less dense medium (e.g. glass to air, or water to air), and 'density' refers to the index of refraction: a more dense medium has a higher index.

Does this help?
 
Tyvm it definately helpe
 
Mohd95 said:
My textbook says that for total internal reflection to occur 2 conditions need to be met. Light is traveling more slowly in the first medium than the second medium
Sounds right to me.
I mean isn't light traveling from air to glass therefore entering from a less dense medium into a more dense medium meaning light is faster in the first medium than the second medium.
Sure, light travels from air to glass, but that's not where the total internal reflection is taking place. The total internal reflection takes place where the light is going from glass to air (or trying to, at least). (Just as Andy Resnick explained.)

I think you just misinterpreted your textbook a bit. In your example, the 'first medium' would be the glass, not the air. (I hope the text went on to explain things a bit more clearly.)
 
I would like to use a pentaprism with some amount of magnification. The pentaprism will be used to reflect a real image at 90 degrees angle but I also want the reflected image to appear larger. The distance between the prism and the real image is about 70cm. The pentaprism has two reflecting sides (surfaces) with mirrored coating and two refracting sides. I understand that one of the four sides needs to be curved (spherical curvature) to achieve the magnification effect. But which of the...
Back
Top