regular reflection
The similarity of the two is that if.... example: if you shined a flashlight at a 30 degree angle on a mirror it will reflect and show as a 30 degree angle on the other side. They are equal.
Reflect the line of physics And angles will have the dame degrees either side As taught by Sir Isaac Newton (one of the best)
By convention angles are measured from the normal to the reflecting surface. The angle of incidence, 35 degrees, is equal to the angle of reflection. In this case 35 degrees. The answer is 35 degrees.
It reflects at like 45 degrees I think. No, it reflects off at the same angle it hits the mirror. If the light wave hits the mirror at a 30o angle on the left side, it will reflect off at a 30o angle on the right side. Scientists usually measure these angles from an imaginary line perpendicular to the mirror at the point where the light wave hits the reflecting surface; sounds awkward, but it makes the math easier.
reflect it
Newton: "The angle of incidence equals the angle of reflection." That is good enough for most people.
it will shine bak x
regular reflection
Newton: " the angle of incidence equals the angle of refraction."
a reflects angle is an angle that is bigger than 180 degrees but less than 360 degrees..i had trouble on this one too..:P hope this helped!!
it will reflect off it
Yes, because if you exceed the critical angle you will be out of the acceptance angle and the light will not reflect properly and the resulting signal will not be usable.
if it is a normal mirror the light we reflect of the mirror from a different angle the angle on which it comes from is the same angles as it goes out.
you put it at a 90 degree angle
you put it at a 90 degree angle
The similarity of the two is that if.... example: if you shined a flashlight at a 30 degree angle on a mirror it will reflect and show as a 30 degree angle on the other side. They are equal.