Total Internal Reflection?

Could somebody please explain the entirety of Total Internal Reflection in regards to the CIE O level syllabus? I usually use miniphysics.com for help, but even their notes are too difficult for me to comprehend. Please help! Thanks!

1 Answer
Apr 22, 2016

Snell's law helps to understand this.

Explanation:

Snell's law tells us how light behaves when it goes from one medium into another.
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In the above, Snell's law tells us that :
n_1sintheta_1=n_2sintheta_2

If light is travelling from one medium to a medium with a lower refractive index (or put another way, from one medium to a less optically dense medium) then n_1>n_2

By Snell's law then theta_2>theta_1 (following the maths of Snell's law)

If you increase the angle of incidence, theta_1 eventually theta _2 will increase until it is reflected along the boundary. At this point theta_2 is 90^0 (the critical angle).

Beyond this, and the ray will be reflected - this is total internal reflection.

For example, if medium 1 is glass (n_1=1.55) and medium 2 is a vacuum (n_2=1)

We can see that theta_2=90^0 occurs when:

1.55*sin(theta_1)=1*sin(90^0)
hence
sin(theta_1)=1/1.55
theta_1=40^0
Hence when theta_1>40^0 the ray is reflected (total internal reflection)

If you try theta_1=41^0 then
1.55*sin(41)=1*sin(theta_1)
1.02=sin(theta_1)
And theta_1 cannot be solved. Does this help?!