What is the SI unit for refractive index?

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SUMMARY

The refractive index has no SI unit as it is defined as a ratio of the velocity of light in a material to the velocity of light in a vacuum, resulting in a dimensionless quantity. This means that the units cancel out, leaving only a numerical value that represents the ratio. Additionally, refractive index can be expressed in various forms, such as Refractive Index Units (RIU), which are used in applications like optical biosensing and evanescent wave sensors.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of the concept of refractive index
  • Basic knowledge of light velocity in different media
  • Familiarity with ratios and dimensionless quantities
  • Knowledge of optical biosensing techniques
NEXT STEPS
  • Research the applications of refractive index in optical biosensing
  • Learn about the principles of evanescent wave sensors
  • Explore the concept of dimensionless quantities in physics
  • Investigate the significance of Refractive Index Units (RIU) in scientific measurements
USEFUL FOR

Students studying optics, physicists, engineers working with optical sensors, and anyone interested in the principles of light behavior in different materials.

kindaichi
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I am doing my homework and i come across a question.

What is the SI unit for refractive index?All my revision books did not have the answer.Or perhaps the book is wrong by any chance?
 
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Considering that the index of refraction is defined as a ratio of velocitys, What units MUST it have? What are the units of ANYthing defined as a ratio?
 
Integral said:
Considering that the index of refraction is defined as a ratio of velocitys, What units MUST it have? What are the units of ANYthing defined as a ratio?


Hhmm.....no units?Sorry,i am a bit blur here.
 
hi kindaichi... for you info, refractive index have no si units, since from the definition refractive index is the ratio of velocity of light in a material divided with velocity of light in vacuum. this is what is meant by "integral". as it is a ratio between velocity of light in material vs velocity of light in vacuum, both unit for the velosity was canceled out and the only thing left is the number which indicates the ratio. and that ratio is the refractive index. but there are a lot of expression can described the refractive index. for example in brix percent. the expression is depend on the application.
 
Just adding on what's been said.

When I see these unit problem, I tend to look at the equations. For example, F = ma..even if I don't know the unit for force..I can derive it.

kg *m/s^2 is the equiv. of ma...so I know the unit for force must be kg m/s^2 (which we simplify and call it Newton, but both are correct).

Try that next time
 
Integral said:
Considering that the index of refraction is defined as a ratio of velocitys, What units MUST it have? What are the units of ANYthing defined as a ratio?



For a RI detector, Refractive Index Range: 1 - 1.75 RIU...what RIU mean?
 
RIU: Refractive Units Index. It is used in optical biosensing, for evanescent wave sensors (optical waveguides, ring resonators, interferometers, surface plasmon resonance). It is the minimun detectable change in the refractive index of the surface where the evanescent wave is travelling.
 

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