What is the angle between the two emerging beams of light?

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Homework Help Overview

The problem involves the refraction of light through a prism, specifically a mixture of red and blue light entering a prism with given angles and indices of refraction. The goal is to determine the angle between the two emerging beams of light after passing through the prism.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Assumption checking, Problem interpretation

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • The original poster attempts to apply Snell's Law to find the angles of refraction for both red and blue light, but expresses uncertainty about their assumptions regarding the angle of incidence and the index of refraction of the prism.
  • Some participants question the assumptions made about the angles and the conditions for total internal reflection at the interfaces.
  • There is discussion about the importance of drawing a diagram to visualize the problem and clarify the angles involved.

Discussion Status

The discussion is ongoing, with participants providing feedback on the original poster's diagram and assumptions. Some guidance has been offered regarding the need to accurately represent the angles of incidence and refraction, but no consensus has been reached on the correctness of the original calculations.

Contextual Notes

Participants note the importance of understanding the geometry of the situation, particularly how the light behaves at each interface of the prism. There is also mention of the need for clarity on the angles being measured and the effects of refraction.

FunkyFrap
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Homework Statement


Light consisting of a mixture of red and blue light enters a 40°, 70°, 70° prism along a line parallel to the side opposite the 40° vertex. The index of refraction of the prism material for blue light is 1.530, and for red light it is 1.525. What is the angle between the two emerging beams of light?

Homework Equations


n_{1}*sin(Θ_{1}) = n_{2}*sin(Θ_{2})
n_{red} = 1.525
n_{blue} = 1.530
∆Θ = Θ_{blue} - Θ_{red}

The Attempt at a Solution


This is dispersion, so the incident light creates two refracted light rays. So, by Snell's Law

n*sin(Θ) = n_{red}*sin(Θ_{red})
n*sin(Θ) = n_{blue}*sin(Θ_{blue})

Now here's the part I'm not entirely sure about but decided to go with anyways:
I assumed Θ = 70^{°} was the angle of incidence and that the index of refraction of the prism is the same as glass n = 1.52

Plugging in I get
Θ_{blue} = 69.5^{°}
Θ_{red} = 69.0^{°}

Therefore,
∆Θ = 0.5^{°}

which is one of the answers! But...I'm not too confident about this result because I only assumed what Θ was and what the index of refraction of the prism was without exactly knowing why. So even if my answer's right I still don't completely understand what I did.

Could anyone help me out with this?
 
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FunkyFrap said:
But...I'm not too confident about this result because I only assumed what Θ was and what the index of refraction of the prism was without exactly knowing why.
Two things:
(1) The angles of incidence and refraction are measured from the normal to the surface.
(2) The light passes through two surfaces, thus two refractions must be considered.

Draw yourself a diagram!
 
PhysicsProblem.png

Here's the diagram I drew for the problem. I had it on paper so I re-drew in Paint.
Now I'm have doubts if that's even right, heh.
 
Are you sure that there's total internal reflection at the second interface?
 
gneill said:
Are you sure that there's total internal reflection at the second interface?

On second thought, no actually. Truthfully I doodled that after looking at some the book's pictures of light bouncing off a droplet.

Is this better? It looks like it makes more sense this time around.
PhysicsProblem.png
 
Better, yes. You might want to exaggerate the angle of refraction at the first surface a bit to reveal the geometry. You'll need the angle of incidence at the second interface.
 
gneill said:
Better, yes. You might want to exaggerate the angle of refraction at the first surface a bit to reveal the geometry. You'll need the angle of incidence at the second interface.
PhysicsProblem.png
 
One problem. The beam of light will not stay horizontal. It will bend at the first interface (there is refraction after all). So your angle f will not be angle of incidence for the second interface.
 

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