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Laws of Reflection. From the Activity you performed, when you shine an incident light ray at a plane mirror, the light is reflected off the mirror and forms a reflected ray. This behaviour leads to the 2 laws of reflection The angle of incidence is equal to the angle of reflection
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Laws of Reflection • From the Activity you performed, when you shine an incident light ray at a plane mirror, the light is reflected off the mirror and forms a reflected ray. • This behaviour leads to the 2 laws of reflection • The angle of incidence is equal to the angle of reflection • The incident ray, the reflected ray, and the normal all lie in the same plane.
Normal Incident ray Reflected ray
Reflecting Light Off Surfaces When a series of parallel incident rays strike a flat reflective surface • the incidence angles are all identical • angle of reflection will also be identical reflected rays Incident rays
If parallel incident rays were directed at an irregular surface, they will have different incidence angles. The reflected rays will be reflected in many directions. This is known as diffuse reflection Incident rays Reflected rays
Reflection and Dyslexia • People with dyslexia have difficulty reading print • complain about the glare off white paper • there is too much reflected light • condition can be helped by the use of coloured filtered glasses
Using Light Rays to Locate an Image • Light rays and the laws of reflection help determine how and where an image is formed in a plane mirror. • REFLECTION is the bouncing back of light rays from a surface
We all know that light travels in a straight line. When your eyes detect reflected light from plane mirrors, your brain projects the light rays back in a straight line.
Types of Images Real Images- mirrors can produce images that can be projected on a screen. A real image is ALWAYS inverted and appears in front of the mirror.
Virtual Image- mirrors can also produce images that cannot be projected on a screen. A virtual image is ALWAYS upright and appears behind the mirror.
Locating images in a Plane Mirror reflected mirror incident object Image of object
Locating Images in a Plane Mirror • From the top of the object draw 2 incident rays • From mirror draw 2 reflected rays • extend reflected rays behind mirror • where the extended lines cross, behind the mirror, the image forms • repeat above steps for bottom of object
Locating Images in a Plane Mirror Is there any easier way? Of course... Draw line & measure Repeat lines behind mirror 2cm 2cm object 3.5cm 3.5cm mirror
Locating Images in a Plane Mirror • From top of object, draw a line perpendicular to mirror (along normal) • measure the distance of this line and extend the line, the same distance, behind the mirror • repeat this step from the bottom of the object • for complicated objects, draw more than two lines 2 cm 3.2 cm 2 cm
Steps for drawing Plane Mirror Ray Diagrams: • 1. A ray that strikes perpendicular to the mirror surface, reflects perpendicular to the mirror. Thereflected ray is extended beyond the mirror. • 2. A ray that strikes the mirror at any angle reflects so the angle of incidence equals the angle of reflection. The reflected ray is extended beyond the mirror.
Ray Diagram Using 2 Points: Perpendicular ray Reflected ray Incident ray
Example: • Let’s draw the letter P together on the board P ?
Lets Practice!! • Using the information provided, draw these 2 images using the principles of reflection off a PLANE MIRROR. • Use at least 3 points off of the object.
Types of Mirrors • Plane Mirror- a flat mirror that reflects light rays in the same way that they approach the mirror. • Concave Mirror- a converging mirror where light rays that strike the mirror surface are reflected so they converge or “come together”, at a point.
3. Convex Mirrors- a diverging mirror where light rays that strike the mirror surface are reflected so that they diverge, or “go apart” and they never come to a point.
S.A.L.T • SALT is used to describe images formed by mirrors. • S- Size: compared to original object is it same size, smaller or bigger? • A- Attitude: which way the image is oriented compared to the original object (upright or inverted). • L- Location: location of the image (in front or behind the mirror). • T- Type: is the image a real image or virtual image?
PLANE MIRRORS • Characteristics of a plane mirror image: • Object size= Image Size • Object distance from mirror= image distance from mirror • Attitude (orientation) is ALWAYS upright • ALWAYS forms a virtual image • Image is reversed- left to right
The image in a plane mirror appears to be backwards compared to how we view the object directly. • This is why the word on the front of an AMBULANCE is written backwards- so it can be read when seen in a rear-view mirror. AMBULANCE
References • kilby.sac.on.ca/faculty/gbrennagh