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Snell's law

Snell's law (also known as the Snell–Descartes law, the ibn-Sahl law, and the law of refraction) is a formula used to describe the relationship between the angles of incidence and refraction, when referring to light or other waves passing through a boundary between two different isotropic media, such as water, glass, or air. In optics, the law is used in ray tracing to compute the angles of incidence or refraction, and in experimental optics to find the refractive index of a material. The law is also satisfied in meta-materials, which allow light to be bent "backward" at a negative angle of refraction with a negative refractive index.

Refraction of light at the interface between two media of different refractive indices, with n2 > n1. Since the velocity is lower in the second medium (v2 < v1), the angle of refraction θ2 is less than the angle of incidence θ1; that is, the ray in the higher-index medium is closer to the normal.

The law states that, for a given pair of media, the ratio of the sines of angle of incidence () and angle of refraction () is equal to the refractive index of the second medium with regard to the first () which is equal to the ratio of the refractive indices () of the two media, or equivalently, to the ratio of the phase velocities () in the two media.[1]

The law follows from Fermat's principle of least time, which in turn follows from the propagation of light as waves.

History edit

 
Reproduction of a page of Ibn Sahl's manuscript showing his discovery of the law of refraction

Ptolemy, in Alexandria, Egypt,[2] had found a relationship regarding refraction angles, but it was inaccurate for angles that were not small. Ptolemy was confident he had found an accurate empirical law, partially as a result of slightly altering his data to fit theory (see: confirmation bias).[3]

 
An 1837 view of the history of "the Law of the Sines"[4]

The law was eventually named after Snell, although it was first discovered by the Persian scientist Ibn Sahl, at Baghdad court in 984.[5][6][7] In the manuscript On Burning Mirrors and Lenses, Sahl used the law to derive lens shapes that focus light with no geometric aberration.[8]

Alhazen, in his Book of Optics (1021), came close to rediscovering the law of refraction, but he did not take this step.[9]

The law was rediscovered by Thomas Harriot in 1602,[10] who however did not publish his results although he had corresponded with Kepler on this very subject. In 1621, the Dutch astronomer Willebrord Snellius (1580–1626)—Snell—derived a mathematically equivalent form, that remained unpublished during his lifetime. René Descartes independently derived the law using heuristic momentum conservation arguments in terms of sines in his 1637 essay Dioptrique, and used it to solve a range of optical problems. Rejecting Descartes' solution, Pierre de Fermat arrived at the same solution based solely on his principle of least time. Descartes assumed the speed of light was infinite, yet in his derivation of Snell's law he also assumed the denser the medium, the greater the speed of light. Fermat supported the opposing assumptions, i.e., the speed of light is finite, and his derivation depended upon the speed of light being slower in a denser medium.[11][12] Fermat's derivation also utilized his invention of adequality, a mathematical procedure equivalent to differential calculus, for finding maxima, minima, and tangents.[13][14]

In his influential mathematics book Geometry, Descartes solves a problem that was worked on by Apollonius of Perga and Pappus of Alexandria. Given n lines L and a point P(L) on each line, find the locus of points Q such that the lengths of the line segments QP(L) satisfy certain conditions. For example, when n = 4, given the lines a, b, c, and d and a point A on a, B on b, and so on, find the locus of points Q such that the product QA*QB equals the product QC*QD. When the lines are not all parallel, Pappus showed that the loci are conics, but when Descartes considered larger n, he obtained cubic and higher degree curves. To show that the cubic curves were interesting, he showed that they arose naturally in optics from Snell's law.[15]

According to Dijksterhuis,[16] "In De natura lucis et proprietate (1662) Isaac Vossius said that Descartes had seen Snell's paper and concocted his own proof. We now know this charge to be undeserved but it has been adopted many times since." Both Fermat and Huygens repeated this accusation that Descartes had copied Snell. In French, Snell's Law is sometimes called "la loi de Descartes" or more frequently "loi de Snell-Descartes".

 
Christiaan Huygens' construction

In his 1678 Traité de la Lumière, Christiaan Huygens showed how Snell's law of sines could be explained by, or derived from, the wave nature of light, using what we have come to call the Huygens–Fresnel principle.

With the development of modern optical and electromagnetic theory, the ancient Snell's law was brought into a new stage. In 1962, Bloembergen showed that at the boundary of nonlinear medium, the Snell's law should be written in a general form.[17] In 2008 and 2011, plasmonic metasurfaces were also demonstrated to change the reflection and refraction directions of light beam.[18][19]

Explanation edit

 
Snell's law on a wall in Leiden

Snell's law is used to determine the direction of light rays through refractive media with varying indices of refraction. The indices of refraction of the media, labeled  ,   and so on, are used to represent the factor by which a light ray's speed decreases when traveling through a refractive medium, such as glass or water, as opposed to its velocity in a vacuum.

As light passes the border between media, depending upon the relative refractive indices of the two media, the light will either be refracted to a lesser angle, or a greater one. These angles are measured with respect to the normal line, represented perpendicular to the boundary. In the case of light traveling from air into water, light would be refracted towards the normal line, because the light is slowed down in water; light traveling from water to air would refract away from the normal line.

Refraction between two surfaces is also referred to as reversible because if all conditions were identical, the angles would be the same for light propagating in the opposite direction.

Snell's law is generally true only for isotropic or specular media (such as glass). In anisotropic media such as some crystals, birefringence may split the refracted ray into two rays, the ordinary or o-ray which follows Snell's law, and the other extraordinary or e-ray which may not be co-planar with the incident ray.

When the light or other wave involved is monochromatic, that is, of a single frequency, Snell's law can also be expressed in terms of a ratio of wavelengths in the two media,   and  :

 

Derivations and formula edit

 
Wavefronts from a point source in the context of Snell's law. The region below the grey line has a higher index of refraction, and proportionally lower speed of light, than the region above it.

Snell's law can be derived in various ways.

Derivation from Fermat's principle edit

Snell's law can be derived from Fermat's principle, which states that the light travels the path which takes the least time. By taking the derivative of the optical path length, the stationary point is found giving the path taken by the light. (There are situations of light violating Fermat's principle by not taking the least time path, as in reflection in a (spherical) mirror.) In a classic analogy, the area of lower refractive index is replaced by a beach, the area of higher refractive index by the sea, and the fastest way for a rescuer on the beach to get to a drowning person in the sea is to run along a path that follows Snell's law.

 
Light from medium 1, point Q, enters medium 2, refraction occurs, and finally the light reaches point P.

As shown in the figure to the right, assume the refractive index of medium 1 and medium 2 are   and   respectively. Light enters medium 2 from medium 1 via point O.

  is the angle of incidence,   is the angle of refraction with respect to the normal.

The phase velocities of light in medium 1 and medium 2 are

  and
  respectively.

  is the speed of light in vacuum.

Let T be the time required for the light to travel from point Q through point O to point P.

 

where a, b, l and x are as denoted in the right-hand figure, x being the varying parameter.

To minimize it, one can differentiate :

  (stationary point)

Note that  

and  

Therefore,

 
 
 
 

Derivation from Huygens's principle edit

Alternatively, Snell's law can be derived using interference of all possible paths of light wave from source to observer—it results in destructive interference everywhere except extrema of phase (where interference is constructive)—which become actual paths.

Derivation from Maxwell's equations edit

Another way to derive Snell's Law involves an application of the general boundary conditions of Maxwell equations for electromagnetic radiation and induction.

Derivation from conservation of energy and momentum edit

Yet another way to derive Snell's law is based on translation symmetry considerations.[20] For example, a homogeneous surface perpendicular to the z direction cannot change the transverse momentum. Since the propagation vector   is proportional to the photon's momentum, the transverse propagation direction   must remain the same in both regions. Assume without loss of generality a plane of incidence in the   plane  . Using the well known dependence of the wavenumber on the refractive index of the medium, we derive Snell's law immediately.

 
 
 

where   is the wavenumber in vacuum. Although no surface is truly homogeneous at the atomic scale, full translational symmetry is an excellent approximation whenever the region is homogeneous on the scale of the light wavelength.

Vector form edit

Given a normalized light vector   (pointing from the light source toward the surface) and a normalized plane normal vector  , one can work out the normalized reflected and refracted rays, via the cosines of the angle of incidence   and angle of refraction  , without explicitly using the sine values or any trigonometric functions or angles:[21]

 

Note:   must be positive, which it will be if   is the normal vector that points from the surface toward the side where the light is coming from, the region with index  . If   is negative, then   points to the side without the light, so start over with   replaced by its negative.

 

This reflected direction vector points back toward the side of the surface where the light came from.

Now apply Snell's law to the ratio of sines to derive the formula for the refracted ray's direction vector:

 
 
 

The formula may appear simpler in terms of renamed simple values   and  , avoiding any appearance of trig function names or angle names:

 

Example:

 
 
 

The cosine values may be saved and used in the Fresnel equations for working out the intensity of the resulting rays.

Total internal reflection is indicated by a negative radicand in the equation for  , which can only happen for rays crossing into a less-dense medium ( ).

Total internal reflection and critical angle edit

 
Demonstration of no refraction at angles greater than the critical angle

When light travels from a medium with a higher refractive index to one with a lower refractive index, Snell's law seems to require in some cases (whenever the angle of incidence is large enough) that the sine of the angle of refraction be greater than one. This of course is impossible, and the light in such cases is completely reflected by the boundary, a phenomenon known as total internal reflection. The largest possible angle of incidence which still results in a refracted ray is called the critical angle; in this case the refracted ray travels along the boundary between the two media.

 
Refraction of light at the interface between two media

For example, consider a ray of light moving from water to air with an angle of incidence of 50°. The refractive indices of water and air are approximately 1.333 and 1, respectively, so Snell's law gives us the relation

 

which is impossible to satisfy. The critical angle θcrit is the value of θ1 for which θ2 equals 90°:

 

Dispersion edit

In many wave-propagation media, wave velocity changes with frequency or wavelength of the waves; this is true of light propagation in most transparent substances other than a vacuum. These media are called dispersive. The result is that the angles determined by Snell's law also depend on frequency or wavelength, so that a ray of mixed wavelengths, such as white light, will spread or disperse. Such dispersion of light in glass or water underlies the origin of rainbows and other optical phenomena, in which different wavelengths appear as different colors.

In optical instruments, dispersion leads to chromatic aberration; a color-dependent blurring that sometimes is the resolution-limiting effect. This was especially true in refracting telescopes, before the invention of achromatic objective lenses.

Lossy, absorbing, or conducting media edit

In a conducting medium, permittivity and index of refraction are complex-valued. Consequently, so are the angle of refraction and the wave-vector. This implies that, while the surfaces of constant real phase are planes whose normals make an angle equal to the angle of refraction with the interface normal, the surfaces of constant amplitude, in contrast, are planes parallel to the interface itself. Since these two planes do not in general coincide with each other, the wave is said to be inhomogeneous.[22] The refracted wave is exponentially attenuated, with exponent proportional to the imaginary component of the index of refraction.[23][24]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Born and Wolf (1959). Principles of Optics. New York, NY: Pergamon Press INC. p. 37.
  2. ^ David Michael Harland (2007). "Cassini at Saturn: Huygens results". p.1. ISBN 0-387-26129-X
  3. ^ "Ptolemy (ca. 100-ca. 170)". Eric Weinstein's World of Scientific Biography.
  4. ^ William Whewell, History of the Inductive Science from the Earliest to the Present Times, London: John H. Parker, 1837.
  5. ^ Papadopoulos, Athanase (2017). "Roshdi Rashed, Historian of Greek and Arabic Mathematics". HAL Open Science. p. 12. hal-01653436.
  6. ^ Mourad Zghal; Hamid-Eddine Bouali; Zohra Ben Lakhdar; Habib Hamam. "The first steps for learning optics: Ibn Sahl's, Al-Haytham's and Young's works on refraction as typical examples" (PDF). R. Rashed credited Ibn Sahl with discovering the law of refraction [23], usually called Snell's law and also Snell and Descartes' law.
  7. ^ Smith, A. Mark (2015). From Sight to Light: The Passage from Ancient to Modern Optics. University of Chicago Press. p. 178. ISBN 978-0-226-17476-1.
  8. ^ Rashed, Roshdi (1990). "A pioneer in anaclastics: Ibn Sahl on burning mirrors and lenses". Isis. 81 (3): 464–491. doi:10.1086/355456. S2CID 144361526.[disputed ][clarification needed]
  9. ^ A. I. Sabra (1981), Theories of Light from Descartes to Newton, Cambridge University Press. (cf. Pavlos Mihas, , p. 5, Demokritus University, Thrace, Greece.)
  10. ^ Kwan, A.; Dudley, J.; Lantz, E. (2002). "Who really discovered Snell's law?". Physics World. 15 (4): 64. doi:10.1088/2058-7058/15/4/44.
  11. ^ Florian Cajori, A History of Physics in its Elementary Branches: Including the Evolution of Physical Laboratories (1922)
  12. ^ Ferdinand Rosenberger, Geschichte der Physik (1882) Part. II, p.114
  13. ^ Carl Benjamin Boyer, The Rainbow: From Myth to Mathematics (1959)
  14. ^ Florian Cajori, "Who was the First Inventor of Calculus" The American Mathematical Monthly (1919) Vol.26
  15. ^ The Geometry of Rene Descartes (Dover Books on Mathematics) by Rene Descartes, David Eugene Smith and Marcia L. Latham (Jun 1, 1954).
  16. ^ Dijksterhuis, Fokko Jan (2004). Lenses and Waves: Christiaan Huygens and the Mathematical Science of Optics in the Seventeenth Century. Springer. ISBN 1-4020-2697-8.
  17. ^ Bloembergen, N.; Pershan, P. S. (1962). "Light waves at the boundary of nonlinear media" (PDF). Physical Review. 128 (2): 606. Bibcode:1962PhRv..128..606B. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.128.606. hdl:1874/7432. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-10-09.
  18. ^ Xu, T.; et al. (2008). "Plasmonic deflector". Opt. Express. 16 (7): 4753–9. Bibcode:2008OExpr..16.4753X. doi:10.1364/oe.16.004753. PMID 18542573.
  19. ^ Yu, Nanfang; Genevet, Patrice; Kats, Mikhail A.; Aieta, Francesco; Tetienne, Jean-Philippe; Capasso, Federico; Gaburro, Zeno (October 2011). "Light Propagation with Phase Discontinuities: Generalized Laws of Reflection and Refraction". Science. 334 (6054): 333–7. Bibcode:2011Sci...334..333Y. doi:10.1126/science.1210713. PMID 21885733. S2CID 10156200.
  20. ^ Joannopoulos, John D; Johnson, SG; Winn, JN; Meade, RD (2008). Photonic Crystals: Molding the Flow of Light (2nd ed.). Princeton NJ: Princeton University Press. p. 31. ISBN 978-0-691-12456-8.
  21. ^ Glassner, Andrew S. (1989). An Introduction to Ray Tracing. Morgan Kaufmann. ISBN 0-12-286160-4.
  22. ^ Born and Wolf, sec.13.2, "Refraction and reflection at a metal surface"
  23. ^ Hecht, Optics, sec. 4.8, Optical properties of metals.
  24. ^ S. J. Orfanidis, Electromagnetic Waves & Antennas, sec. 7.9, Oblique Incidence on a Lossy Medium, [1]

External links edit

  • Ibn Sahl and Snell's Law
  • Discovery of the law of refraction
  • Snell's Law of Refraction (Wave Fronts) by Todd Rowland, Wolfram Demonstrations Project
  • Snell's law on a wall in downtown Leiden 2018-04-27 at the Wayback Machine
  • Shore line effect

snell, also, known, snell, descartes, sahl, refraction, formula, used, describe, relationship, between, angles, incidence, refraction, when, referring, light, other, waves, passing, through, boundary, between, different, isotropic, media, such, water, glass, o. Snell s law also known as the Snell Descartes law the ibn Sahl law and the law of refraction is a formula used to describe the relationship between the angles of incidence and refraction when referring to light or other waves passing through a boundary between two different isotropic media such as water glass or air In optics the law is used in ray tracing to compute the angles of incidence or refraction and in experimental optics to find the refractive index of a material The law is also satisfied in meta materials which allow light to be bent backward at a negative angle of refraction with a negative refractive index Refraction of light at the interface between two media of different refractive indices with n2 gt n1 Since the velocity is lower in the second medium v2 lt v1 the angle of refraction 82 is less than the angle of incidence 81 that is the ray in the higher index medium is closer to the normal The law states that for a given pair of media the ratio of the sines of angle of incidence 8 1 displaystyle theta 1 and angle of refraction 8 2 displaystyle theta 2 is equal to the refractive index of the second medium with regard to the first n 21 displaystyle n 21 which is equal to the ratio of the refractive indices n 2 n 1 displaystyle tfrac n 2 n 1 of the two media or equivalently to the ratio of the phase velocities v 1 v 2 displaystyle tfrac v 1 v 2 in the two media 1 sin 8 1 sin 8 2 n 21 n 2 n 1 v 1 v 2 displaystyle frac sin theta 1 sin theta 2 n 21 frac n 2 n 1 frac v 1 v 2 The law follows from Fermat s principle of least time which in turn follows from the propagation of light as waves Contents 1 History 2 Explanation 3 Derivations and formula 3 1 Derivation from Fermat s principle 3 2 Derivation from Huygens s principle 3 3 Derivation from Maxwell s equations 3 4 Derivation from conservation of energy and momentum 3 5 Vector form 4 Total internal reflection and critical angle 5 Dispersion 6 Lossy absorbing or conducting media 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksHistory edit nbsp Reproduction of a page of Ibn Sahl s manuscript showing his discovery of the law of refractionPtolemy in Alexandria Egypt 2 had found a relationship regarding refraction angles but it was inaccurate for angles that were not small Ptolemy was confident he had found an accurate empirical law partially as a result of slightly altering his data to fit theory see confirmation bias 3 nbsp An 1837 view of the history of the Law of the Sines 4 The law was eventually named after Snell although it was first discovered by the Persian scientist Ibn Sahl at Baghdad court in 984 5 6 7 In the manuscript On Burning Mirrors and Lenses Sahl used the law to derive lens shapes that focus light with no geometric aberration 8 Alhazen in his Book of Optics 1021 came close to rediscovering the law of refraction but he did not take this step 9 The law was rediscovered by Thomas Harriot in 1602 10 who however did not publish his results although he had corresponded with Kepler on this very subject In 1621 the Dutch astronomer Willebrord Snellius 1580 1626 Snell derived a mathematically equivalent form that remained unpublished during his lifetime Rene Descartes independently derived the law using heuristic momentum conservation arguments in terms of sines in his 1637 essay Dioptrique and used it to solve a range of optical problems Rejecting Descartes solution Pierre de Fermat arrived at the same solution based solely on his principle of least time Descartes assumed the speed of light was infinite yet in his derivation of Snell s law he also assumed the denser the medium the greater the speed of light Fermat supported the opposing assumptions i e the speed of light is finite and his derivation depended upon the speed of light being slower in a denser medium 11 12 Fermat s derivation also utilized his invention of adequality a mathematical procedure equivalent to differential calculus for finding maxima minima and tangents 13 14 In his influential mathematics book Geometry Descartes solves a problem that was worked on by Apollonius of Perga and Pappus of Alexandria Given n lines L and a point P L on each line find the locus of points Q such that the lengths of the line segments QP L satisfy certain conditions For example when n 4 given the lines a b c and d and a point A on a B on b and so on find the locus of points Q such that the product QA QB equals the product QC QD When the lines are not all parallel Pappus showed that the loci are conics but when Descartes considered larger n he obtained cubic and higher degree curves To show that the cubic curves were interesting he showed that they arose naturally in optics from Snell s law 15 According to Dijksterhuis 16 In De natura lucis et proprietate 1662 Isaac Vossius said that Descartes had seen Snell s paper and concocted his own proof We now know this charge to be undeserved but it has been adopted many times since Both Fermat and Huygens repeated this accusation that Descartes had copied Snell In French Snell s Law is sometimes called la loi de Descartes or more frequently loi de Snell Descartes nbsp Christiaan Huygens constructionIn his 1678 Traite de la Lumiere Christiaan Huygens showed how Snell s law of sines could be explained by or derived from the wave nature of light using what we have come to call the Huygens Fresnel principle With the development of modern optical and electromagnetic theory the ancient Snell s law was brought into a new stage In 1962 Bloembergen showed that at the boundary of nonlinear medium the Snell s law should be written in a general form 17 In 2008 and 2011 plasmonic metasurfaces were also demonstrated to change the reflection and refraction directions of light beam 18 19 Explanation edit nbsp Snell s law on a wall in LeidenSnell s law is used to determine the direction of light rays through refractive media with varying indices of refraction The indices of refraction of the media labeled n 1 displaystyle n 1 nbsp n 2 displaystyle n 2 nbsp and so on are used to represent the factor by which a light ray s speed decreases when traveling through a refractive medium such as glass or water as opposed to its velocity in a vacuum As light passes the border between media depending upon the relative refractive indices of the two media the light will either be refracted to a lesser angle or a greater one These angles are measured with respect to the normal line represented perpendicular to the boundary In the case of light traveling from air into water light would be refracted towards the normal line because the light is slowed down in water light traveling from water to air would refract away from the normal line Refraction between two surfaces is also referred to as reversible because if all conditions were identical the angles would be the same for light propagating in the opposite direction Snell s law is generally true only for isotropic or specular media such as glass In anisotropic media such as some crystals birefringence may split the refracted ray into two rays the ordinary or o ray which follows Snell s law and the other extraordinary or e ray which may not be co planar with the incident ray When the light or other wave involved is monochromatic that is of a single frequency Snell s law can also be expressed in terms of a ratio of wavelengths in the two media l 1 displaystyle lambda 1 nbsp and l 2 displaystyle lambda 2 nbsp sin 8 1 sin 8 2 v 1 v 2 l 1 l 2 displaystyle frac sin theta 1 sin theta 2 frac v 1 v 2 frac lambda 1 lambda 2 nbsp Derivations and formula edit nbsp Wavefronts from a point source in the context of Snell s law The region below the grey line has a higher index of refraction and proportionally lower speed of light than the region above it Snell s law can be derived in various ways Derivation from Fermat s principle edit Snell s law can be derived from Fermat s principle which states that the light travels the path which takes the least time By taking the derivative of the optical path length the stationary point is found giving the path taken by the light There are situations of light violating Fermat s principle by not taking the least time path as in reflection in a spherical mirror In a classic analogy the area of lower refractive index is replaced by a beach the area of higher refractive index by the sea and the fastest way for a rescuer on the beach to get to a drowning person in the sea is to run along a path that follows Snell s law nbsp Light from medium 1 point Q enters medium 2 refraction occurs and finally the light reaches point P As shown in the figure to the right assume the refractive index of medium 1 and medium 2 are n 1 displaystyle n 1 nbsp and n 2 displaystyle n 2 nbsp respectively Light enters medium 2 from medium 1 via point O 8 1 displaystyle theta 1 nbsp is the angle of incidence 8 2 displaystyle theta 2 nbsp is the angle of refraction with respect to the normal The phase velocities of light in medium 1 and medium 2 are v 1 c n 1 displaystyle v 1 c n 1 nbsp and v 2 c n 2 displaystyle v 2 c n 2 nbsp respectively c displaystyle c nbsp is the speed of light in vacuum Let T be the time required for the light to travel from point Q through point O to point P T x 2 a 2 v 1 b 2 l x 2 v 2 x 2 a 2 v 1 b 2 l 2 2 l x x 2 v 2 displaystyle T frac sqrt x 2 a 2 v 1 frac sqrt b 2 l x 2 v 2 frac sqrt x 2 a 2 v 1 frac sqrt b 2 l 2 2lx x 2 v 2 nbsp where a b l and x are as denoted in the right hand figure x being the varying parameter To minimize it one can differentiate d T d x x v 1 x 2 a 2 l x v 2 l x 2 b 2 0 displaystyle frac dT dx frac x v 1 sqrt x 2 a 2 frac l x v 2 sqrt l x 2 b 2 0 nbsp stationary point Note that x x 2 a 2 sin 8 1 displaystyle frac x sqrt x 2 a 2 sin theta 1 nbsp and l x l x 2 b 2 sin 8 2 displaystyle frac l x sqrt l x 2 b 2 sin theta 2 nbsp Therefore d T d x sin 8 1 v 1 sin 8 2 v 2 0 displaystyle frac dT dx frac sin theta 1 v 1 frac sin theta 2 v 2 0 nbsp sin 8 1 v 1 sin 8 2 v 2 displaystyle frac sin theta 1 v 1 frac sin theta 2 v 2 nbsp n 1 sin 8 1 c n 2 sin 8 2 c displaystyle frac n 1 sin theta 1 c frac n 2 sin theta 2 c nbsp n 1 sin 8 1 n 2 sin 8 2 displaystyle n 1 sin theta 1 n 2 sin theta 2 nbsp Derivation from Huygens s principle edit Further information Huygens Fresnel principle Alternatively Snell s law can be derived using interference of all possible paths of light wave from source to observer it results in destructive interference everywhere except extrema of phase where interference is constructive which become actual paths Derivation from Maxwell s equations edit Further information Fresnel equations Another way to derive Snell s Law involves an application of the general boundary conditions of Maxwell equations for electromagnetic radiation and induction Derivation from conservation of energy and momentum edit Yet another way to derive Snell s law is based on translation symmetry considerations 20 For example a homogeneous surface perpendicular to the z direction cannot change the transverse momentum Since the propagation vector k displaystyle vec k nbsp is proportional to the photon s momentum the transverse propagation direction k x k y 0 displaystyle k x k y 0 nbsp must remain the same in both regions Assume without loss of generality a plane of incidence in the z x displaystyle z x nbsp plane k x Region 1 k x Region 2 displaystyle k x text Region 1 k x text Region 2 nbsp Using the well known dependence of the wavenumber on the refractive index of the medium we derive Snell s law immediately k x Region 1 k x Region 2 displaystyle k x text Region 1 k x text Region 2 nbsp n 1 k 0 sin 8 1 n 2 k 0 sin 8 2 displaystyle n 1 k 0 sin theta 1 n 2 k 0 sin theta 2 nbsp n 1 sin 8 1 n 2 sin 8 2 displaystyle n 1 sin theta 1 n 2 sin theta 2 nbsp where k 0 2 p l 0 w c displaystyle k 0 frac 2 pi lambda 0 frac omega c nbsp is the wavenumber in vacuum Although no surface is truly homogeneous at the atomic scale full translational symmetry is an excellent approximation whenever the region is homogeneous on the scale of the light wavelength Vector form edit See also Specular reflection Direction of reflection Given a normalized light vector l displaystyle vec l nbsp pointing from the light source toward the surface and a normalized plane normal vector n displaystyle vec n nbsp one can work out the normalized reflected and refracted rays via the cosines of the angle of incidence 8 1 displaystyle theta 1 nbsp and angle of refraction 8 2 displaystyle theta 2 nbsp without explicitly using the sine values or any trigonometric functions or angles 21 cos 8 1 n l displaystyle cos theta 1 vec n cdot vec l nbsp Note cos 8 1 displaystyle cos theta 1 nbsp must be positive which it will be if n displaystyle vec n nbsp is the normal vector that points from the surface toward the side where the light is coming from the region with index n 1 displaystyle n 1 nbsp If cos 8 1 displaystyle cos theta 1 nbsp is negative then n displaystyle vec n nbsp points to the side without the light so start over with n displaystyle vec n nbsp replaced by its negative v r e f l e c t l 2 cos 8 1 n displaystyle vec v mathrm reflect vec l 2 cos theta 1 vec n nbsp This reflected direction vector points back toward the side of the surface where the light came from Now apply Snell s law to the ratio of sines to derive the formula for the refracted ray s direction vector sin 8 2 n 1 n 2 sin 8 1 n 1 n 2 1 cos 8 1 2 displaystyle sin theta 2 left frac n 1 n 2 right sin theta 1 left frac n 1 n 2 right sqrt 1 left cos theta 1 right 2 nbsp cos 8 2 1 sin 8 2 2 1 n 1 n 2 2 1 cos 8 1 2 displaystyle cos theta 2 sqrt 1 sin theta 2 2 sqrt 1 left frac n 1 n 2 right 2 left 1 left cos theta 1 right 2 right nbsp v r e f r a c t n 1 n 2 l n 1 n 2 cos 8 1 cos 8 2 n displaystyle vec v mathrm refract left frac n 1 n 2 right vec l left frac n 1 n 2 cos theta 1 cos theta 2 right vec n nbsp The formula may appear simpler in terms of renamed simple values r n 1 n 2 displaystyle r n 1 n 2 nbsp and c n l displaystyle c vec n cdot vec l nbsp avoiding any appearance of trig function names or angle names v r e f r a c t r l r c 1 r 2 1 c 2 n displaystyle vec v mathrm refract r vec l left rc sqrt 1 r 2 left 1 c 2 right right vec n nbsp Example l 0 707107 0 707107 n 0 1 r n 1 n 2 0 9 displaystyle vec l 0 707107 0 707107 vec n 0 1 r frac n 1 n 2 0 9 nbsp c cos 8 1 0 707107 1 r 2 1 c 2 cos 8 2 0 771362 displaystyle c cos theta 1 0 707107 sqrt 1 r 2 left 1 c 2 right cos theta 2 0 771362 nbsp v r e f l e c t 0 707107 0 707107 v r e f r a c t 0 636396 0 771362 displaystyle vec v mathrm reflect 0 707107 0 707107 vec v mathrm refract 0 636396 0 771362 nbsp The cosine values may be saved and used in the Fresnel equations for working out the intensity of the resulting rays Total internal reflection is indicated by a negative radicand in the equation for cos 8 2 displaystyle cos theta 2 nbsp which can only happen for rays crossing into a less dense medium n 2 lt n 1 displaystyle n 2 lt n 1 nbsp Total internal reflection and critical angle edit nbsp Demonstration of no refraction at angles greater than the critical angleMain article Total internal reflection When light travels from a medium with a higher refractive index to one with a lower refractive index Snell s law seems to require in some cases whenever the angle of incidence is large enough that the sine of the angle of refraction be greater than one This of course is impossible and the light in such cases is completely reflected by the boundary a phenomenon known as total internal reflection The largest possible angle of incidence which still results in a refracted ray is called the critical angle in this case the refracted ray travels along the boundary between the two media nbsp Refraction of light at the interface between two mediaFor example consider a ray of light moving from water to air with an angle of incidence of 50 The refractive indices of water and air are approximately 1 333 and 1 respectively so Snell s law gives us the relation sin 8 2 n 1 n 2 sin 8 1 1 333 1 sin 50 1 333 0 766 1 021 displaystyle sin theta 2 frac n 1 n 2 sin theta 1 frac 1 333 1 cdot sin left 50 circ right 1 333 cdot 0 766 1 021 nbsp which is impossible to satisfy The critical angle 8crit is the value of 81 for which 82 equals 90 8 crit arcsin n 2 n 1 sin 8 2 arcsin n 2 n 1 48 6 displaystyle theta text crit arcsin left frac n 2 n 1 sin theta 2 right arcsin frac n 2 n 1 48 6 circ nbsp Dispersion editMain article Dispersion optics In many wave propagation media wave velocity changes with frequency or wavelength of the waves this is true of light propagation in most transparent substances other than a vacuum These media are called dispersive The result is that the angles determined by Snell s law also depend on frequency or wavelength so that a ray of mixed wavelengths such as white light will spread or disperse Such dispersion of light in glass or water underlies the origin of rainbows and other optical phenomena in which different wavelengths appear as different colors In optical instruments dispersion leads to chromatic aberration a color dependent blurring that sometimes is the resolution limiting effect This was especially true in refracting telescopes before the invention of achromatic objective lenses Lossy absorbing or conducting media editSee also Mathematical descriptions of opacity In a conducting medium permittivity and index of refraction are complex valued Consequently so are the angle of refraction and the wave vector This implies that while the surfaces of constant real phase are planes whose normals make an angle equal to the angle of refraction with the interface normal the surfaces of constant amplitude in contrast are planes parallel to the interface itself Since these two planes do not in general coincide with each other the wave is said to be inhomogeneous 22 The refracted wave is exponentially attenuated with exponent proportional to the imaginary component of the index of refraction 23 24 See also editList of refractive indices The refractive index vs wavelength of light Empirical relationship between refractive index and wavelength Evanescent wave Type of field where the net flow of electromagnetic energy is zeroPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Reflection physics Bouncing back of waves at an interface Snell s window Underwater phenomenon due to Snell s Law Calculus of variations Differential calculus on function spaces Brachistochrone curve Fastest curve descent without friction for a simple proof by Jacob Bernoulli Hamiltonian optics Computation of radiowave attenuation in the atmosphere N slit interferometric equationReferences edit Born and Wolf 1959 Principles of Optics New York NY Pergamon Press INC p 37 David Michael Harland 2007 Cassini at Saturn Huygens results p 1 ISBN 0 387 26129 X Ptolemy ca 100 ca 170 Eric Weinstein s World of Scientific Biography William Whewell History of the Inductive Science from the Earliest to the Present Times London John H Parker 1837 Papadopoulos Athanase 2017 Roshdi Rashed Historian of Greek and Arabic Mathematics HAL Open Science p 12 hal 01653436 Mourad Zghal Hamid Eddine Bouali Zohra Ben Lakhdar Habib Hamam The first steps for learning optics Ibn Sahl s Al Haytham s and Young s works on refraction as typical examples PDF R Rashed credited Ibn Sahl with discovering the law of refraction 23 usually called Snell s law and also Snell and Descartes law Smith A Mark 2015 From Sight to Light The Passage from Ancient to Modern Optics University of Chicago Press p 178 ISBN 978 0 226 17476 1 Rashed Roshdi 1990 A pioneer in anaclastics Ibn Sahl on burning mirrors and lenses Isis 81 3 464 491 doi 10 1086 355456 S2CID 144361526 disputed discuss clarification needed A I Sabra 1981 Theories of Light from Descartes to Newton Cambridge University Press cf Pavlos Mihas Use of History in Developing ideas of refraction lenses and rainbow p 5 Demokritus University Thrace Greece Kwan A Dudley J Lantz E 2002 Who really discovered Snell s law Physics World 15 4 64 doi 10 1088 2058 7058 15 4 44 Florian Cajori A History of Physics in its Elementary Branches Including the Evolution of Physical Laboratories 1922 Ferdinand Rosenberger Geschichte der Physik 1882 Part II p 114 Carl Benjamin Boyer The Rainbow From Myth to Mathematics 1959 Florian Cajori Who was the First Inventor of Calculus The American Mathematical Monthly 1919 Vol 26 The Geometry of Rene Descartes Dover Books on Mathematics by Rene Descartes David Eugene Smith and Marcia L Latham Jun 1 1954 Dijksterhuis Fokko Jan 2004 Lenses and Waves Christiaan Huygens and the Mathematical Science of Optics in the Seventeenth Century Springer ISBN 1 4020 2697 8 Bloembergen N Pershan P S 1962 Light waves at the boundary of nonlinear media PDF Physical Review 128 2 606 Bibcode 1962PhRv 128 606B doi 10 1103 PhysRev 128 606 hdl 1874 7432 Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09 Xu T et al 2008 Plasmonic deflector Opt Express 16 7 4753 9 Bibcode 2008OExpr 16 4753X doi 10 1364 oe 16 004753 PMID 18542573 Yu Nanfang Genevet Patrice Kats Mikhail A Aieta Francesco Tetienne Jean Philippe Capasso Federico Gaburro Zeno October 2011 Light Propagation with Phase Discontinuities Generalized Laws of Reflection and Refraction Science 334 6054 333 7 Bibcode 2011Sci 334 333Y doi 10 1126 science 1210713 PMID 21885733 S2CID 10156200 Joannopoulos John D Johnson SG Winn JN Meade RD 2008 Photonic Crystals Molding the Flow of Light 2nd ed Princeton NJ Princeton University Press p 31 ISBN 978 0 691 12456 8 Glassner Andrew S 1989 An Introduction to Ray Tracing Morgan Kaufmann ISBN 0 12 286160 4 Born and Wolf sec 13 2 Refraction and reflection at a metal surface Hecht Optics sec 4 8 Optical properties of metals S J Orfanidis Electromagnetic Waves amp Antennas sec 7 9 Oblique Incidence on a Lossy Medium 1 External links editIbn Sahl and Snell s Law Discovery of the law of refraction Snell s Law of Refraction Wave Fronts by Todd Rowland Wolfram Demonstrations Project Snell s law on a wall in downtown Leiden Archived 2018 04 27 at the Wayback Machine Shore line effect Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Snell 27s law amp oldid 1194758647, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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