Step 1: Understanding the Concept:
Total Internal Reflection (TIR) is the phenomenon where a wave, such as light, traveling from a denser medium to a less dense medium is completely reflected back into the denser medium.
Step 2: Conditions for TIR:
For total internal reflection to occur, two conditions must be met:
The light ray must travel from a denser optical medium to a rarer optical medium. The angle of incidence in the denser medium must be greater than a specific angle called the critical angle (\(i_c\)). The critical angle is the angle of incidence for which the angle of refraction is 90\(^{\circ}\).
Step 3: Ray Diagram:
Diagram Explanation:
Ray 1: The angle of incidence \(i_1\) is less than the critical angle \(i_c\). The ray refracts into the rarer medium, bending away from the normal.
Ray 2: The angle of incidence \(i_2\) is equal to the critical angle \(i_c\). The refracted ray travels along the boundary of the two media (angle of refraction \(r_2 = 90^\circ\)).
Ray 3: The angle of incidence \(i_3\) is greater than the critical angle \(i_c\). The ray does not refract but is completely reflected back into the denser medium, following the laws of reflection (\(i_3 = r_3\)). This is Total Internal Reflection.
The light rays are incident on a convex lens as in figure. If focal length of lens is 20 cm then find the position of image. Show ray diagram as well.