A narrow beam of light containing red (660 nm) and blue (470 nm) wavelengths travels from air through a 1.80 cm thick flat piece of crown glass and back to air again. The beam strikes the glass at a 35.0° incident angle – 10B

A narrow beam of light containing red (660 nm) and blue (470 nm) wavelengths travels from air through a 1.80 cm thick flat piece of crown glass and back to air again. The beam strikes the glass at a 35.0° incident angle. (a) At what angles do the two colors emerge from the glass? red: 35° blue: 35° (b) By what distance (in cm) are the red and blue separated when they emerge?

Answer

Refraction of Red and Blue Light Through Glass | Snell’s Law Explained

Refraction and Separation of Red and Blue Light in a Glass Slab

Problem Setup

  • Incident Angle (θ₁): 35.0°
  • Glass Thickness (t): 1.80 cm
  • Refractive Index of Air (n₁): 1.000
  • Red Light Refractive Index (n_red): 1.512
  • Blue Light Refractive Index (n_blue): 1.523

Step 1: Refraction Inside the Glass

Snell’s Law: n₁ × sin(θ₁) = n₂ × sin(θ₂)

Red Light:

θ₂_red ≈ 22.3°

Blue Light:

θ₂_blue ≈ 22.12°

Emergent Angle for Both: 35.0° (same as incident angle)

Step 2: Lateral Separation Calculation

s = t × sin(θ₁ − θ₂) / cos(θ₂)

Red Light: s ≈ 0.428 cm

Blue Light: s ≈ 0.433 cm

Separation Distance: |0.433 – 0.428| = 0.00522 cm

Summary Table

Light Color Refracted Angle (°) Emergent Angle (°) Lateral Shift (cm)
Red 22.3° 35.0° 0.428
Blue 22.12° 35.0° 0.433
Total Lateral Separation: 0.00522 cm

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