Light reflection and Reflection
Light reflection and Reflection
1. A coin is placed at the bottom of a beaker. When water is poured into the beaker
to a certain height, the coin appears to be raised and is visible to an observer
looking vertically down. However, if more water is added beyond a specific
height, the coin disappears from view. Explain this phenomenon with the help of
ray diagrams, considering the critical angle and total internal reflection.
2. A candle is placed at a certain distance in front of a convex lens. A real and
inverted image is formed on a screen. If the lower half of the lens is now covered
with an opaque material, how will this affect the image formed on the screen?
Will the complete image still be formed? What changes will be observed in the
characteristics (brightness, intensity) of the image? Justify your answer with ray
diagrams.
3. A straight stick appears bent when partially immersed in water.
o (a) Explain why this happens, drawing a ray diagram to illustrate the
refraction of light.
o (b) Does the stick appear to bend towards the water surface or away from
it? Explain your reasoning.
o (c) How would the apparent bending change if the liquid used were denser
than water (e.g., glycerine)? Explain.
4. Can a convex lens simultaneously form a real image of one object and a virtual
image of another object placed at different positions on its principal axis? Explain
your answer with the help of ray diagrams and the lens formula. Consider the
conditions required for the formation of real and virtual images by a convex lens.
5. Two lenses, one convex with focal length f1 and another concave with focal
length f2, are placed in contact.
o (a) Derive an expression for the equivalent focal length of this combination.
o (b) If the numerical value of f1 is less than the numerical value of f2, will
the combination behave as a converging or a diverging lens? Explain.
o (c) What happens to the power of the combination if the distance between
the two lenses is increased slightly?
Answers:
1. The Case of the Disappearing Coin:
(a) Explanation:
Initially, when water is poured to a certain height, light rays from the coin travel
upwards and refract away from the normal at the water-air interface. These
refracted rays reach the observer's eyes, making the coin visible (though
appearing raised due to refraction).
As more water is added, the angle of incidence of the light rays from the coin at
the water-air interface increases.
When the angle of incidence becomes greater than the critical angle for the
water-air interface, total internal reflection occurs. Instead of refracting into the
air, the light rays are reflected back into the water.
Consequently, no light rays from the coin reach the observer's eyes looking
vertically down, making the coin disappear from view.
(b) Ray Diagrams:
Visible Coin: A ray diagram should show light rays originating from the coin,
refracting away from the normal at the water surface, and reaching the
observer's eye. The apparent position of the coin will be higher than its real
position.
Disappearing Coin: A ray diagram should show light rays originating from the
coin striking the water-air interface at an angle greater than the critical angle,
undergoing total internal reflection back into the water, and thus not reaching the
observer's eye.
2. Image Formation with a Twist:
(a) Effect on the Image:
The complete image will still be formed on the screen. Each point on the object
reflects light rays in all directions. The uncovered upper half of the lens will still
refract a sufficient number of rays from every point on the candle to form a
corresponding point on the image.
(b) Changes in Characteristics:
Brightness/Intensity: The brightness or intensity of the image will decrease.
This is because the lower half of the lens, which was contributing to the formation
of the image by refracting light rays, is now blocked. With less light rays
converging to form the image, the image will be dimmer.
Position and Nature: The position and nature (real and inverted) of the image
will remain the same. The focal length of the lens has not changed, and the
object distance remains the same. Therefore, according to the lens formula (
1 1 1
= − ), the image distance v will also remain the same.
F v u
is P=P1+P2−dP1P2.
The power of a lens is given by P=f1. So, the equivalent power of the combination
If the initial distance was considered negligible (lenses in contact, d≈0), the initial
equivalent power was Pinitial=P1+P2.
When d increases, the term −dP1P2 becomes significant.