The formula for the refractive index \( n \) of the prism is:
\[ n = \frac{\sin \left( A + \delta_m \right)}{2} \div \sin \left( \frac{A}{2} \right) \]
where \( A \) is the angle of the prism and \( \delta_m \) is the angle of minimum deviation.
Given \( n = \sqrt{2} \) and \( A = 60^\circ \), we have:
\[ \sqrt{2} = \frac{\sin \left( 60^\circ + \delta_m \right)}{2} \div \sin \left( 30^\circ \right) \]
Since \( \sin(30^\circ) = \frac{1}{2} \), we can simplify:
\[ \sqrt{2} = 2 \sin \left( 60^\circ + \delta_m \right) \div 2 \]
Simplifying further:
\[ \sqrt{2} = \sin \left( 60^\circ + \delta_m \right) \]
Therefore, we have:
\[ \sin \left( 60^\circ + \delta_m \right) = \sin(45^\circ) \]
Solving for \( \delta_m \), we get:
\[ 60^\circ + \delta_m = 90^\circ \quad \Rightarrow \quad \delta_m = 30^\circ \]
The angle of minimum deviation is \( \delta_m = 30^\circ \).
For the angle of minimum deviation, the angle of incidence equals the angle of emergence. Using symmetry, the angle of incidence \( i_m \) is:
\[ i_m = \frac{A + \delta_m}{2} \]
Substituting \( A = 60^\circ \) and \( \delta_m = 30^\circ \):
\[ i_m = \frac{60^\circ + 30^\circ}{2} = 45^\circ \]
The angle of incidence is \( i_m = 45^\circ \).
For the angle of minimum deviation, the angle of incidence equals the angle of emergence. Using symmetry, the angle of incidence \( i_m \) is:
\[ i_m = \frac{A + \delta_m}{2} \]
Substituting \( A = 60^\circ \) and \( \delta_m = 30^\circ \):
\[ i_m = \frac{60^\circ + 30^\circ}{2} = 45^\circ \]
The angle of incidence is \( i_m = 45^\circ \).
A school is organizing a debate competition with participants as speakers and judges. $ S = \{S_1, S_2, S_3, S_4\} $ where $ S = \{S_1, S_2, S_3, S_4\} $ represents the set of speakers. The judges are represented by the set: $ J = \{J_1, J_2, J_3\} $ where $ J = \{J_1, J_2, J_3\} $ represents the set of judges. Each speaker can be assigned only one judge. Let $ R $ be a relation from set $ S $ to $ J $ defined as: $ R = \{(x, y) : \text{speaker } x \text{ is judged by judge } y, x \in S, y \in J\} $.