Understanding Wider Viewing Angles: 96 Degrees & Critical Angle

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An observer underwater perceives a compressed view of the outside world, where a 180-degree view is represented through an angle of 96 degrees, which is twice the critical angle. The critical angle is significant in understanding how light refracts when transitioning from water to air. When rays from above the water surface hit at nearly 90 degrees, they continue at the critical angle underwater, creating a cone that allows for this wide field of view. The discussion emphasizes the symmetrical nature of the angles involved, with the full field of view being 2 times the critical angle. This understanding can be visualized by drawing rays from a fish to the water's surface and observing their refraction.
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There's a para in my textbook which doesn't make much sense to me:

An observer or a fish under water looks up to see a compressed view of the outside world. The 180 degree view from horizon to horizon is seen through an angle of 96 degrees (twice the critical angle). A lens, called fish eye lens used in special photographs, similarly compresses a wide wiew.

What on Earth does that mean? Where did 96 degrees and twice the critical angle come from?
Can someone explain how they got that?
 
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Refraction. Ray hitting water from outside at nearly 90° is going to continue at critical angle under water. That means that cone of ± critical angle gives you a 180° view of world above water.
 
It can be easier thinking of this one backwards - treat the fish as the source. Draw a point below a line. The line is the water surface and the point is the fish. Draw rays coming out from the fish to the surface, refract them, and see where they go. You can draw as many as you like, but the obviously interesting angles are all that you really need.

Rays coming from above the surface to the fish look exactly the same. Remember that the diagram is symmetric about the vertical.
 
Yes I get that but how is it 2c?
 
attachment.php?attachmentid=53853&d=1355309082.png


Here, \small \alpha is the critical angle. So the full FOV is \small 2\alpha.
 

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Thanks a lot. I tried a bit more and got it by saying how the inside angles of the triangle are 90-alpha and then getting it.
 
So I know that electrons are fundamental, there's no 'material' that makes them up, it's like talking about a colour itself rather than a car or a flower. Now protons and neutrons and quarks and whatever other stuff is there fundamentally, I want someone to kind of teach me these, I have a lot of questions that books might not give the answer in the way I understand. Thanks
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