Why do light rays bend towards the center after exiting a convex lens?

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Light rays bend towards the center after exiting a convex lens due to the change in direction caused by the lens's curvature and the varying optical path length. Although they bend away from the normal upon exiting, the curvature of the lens causes a second bending effect towards the center. This is because the normal at the exit point is oriented differently than at the entry point. The shape of the biconvex lens influences the overall trajectory of the light rays. Understanding the normal's role is crucial in explaining this behavior.
sk381
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Hi,

I know that when entering a convex lens, light rays bend towards the center due to refraction. But why do they keep bending towards the center once they exit the lens? Should'nt they now bend away from the lens because they are going from a denser to a rarer medium?

Thanks

SK
 
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Yes, the light rays bend away from the Normal to the surface when exiting the lens. But the ray still has changed direction due to the variation in optical path length through the lens.
 
I am still not clear..
Can you explain more in detail..?

Thanks
 
Do you understand the meaning of Normal in this usage?
 
yes.. I think you mean the line perpendicular to the surface of the convex and parallel to the direction that the ray is traveling in..right/
 
It is because the curve switches in a biconvex lens.

If the lense were like this (( you would get a straightening of the ray.

But if it is like this () you get a second bending toward the center.

Njorl
 
As Norjl said, because the Normal is pointing in a different direction at the exit point.
 

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