Wiki User
∙ 11y agotrue or false
Wiki User
∙ 11y agoIt is 0 degrees.
We measure them on the either side of the mirror and not on the side of the normal to the surface of the mirror because, if the mirror or any reflecting surface is bent, then there will be a difference between the angle of incidence and angle reflection which can be avoided by measuring those angles on the either side of the mirror.
If the ray hits the mirror at an angle of 30 degrees with the mirror surface, the complementary angle that the ray makes with the normal (perpendicular) to the mirror at the point of incidence is (90 - 30) = 60 degrees and since angle of incidence is equal to angle of reflection in a plane mirror, the angle of reflection is 60 degrees.
The angle between the ray and the perpendicular to the mirror (NOT the mirror itself), at the point where the ray hits the mirror is called the angle of incidence.
yes.
The angle of incidence will also be 50 degrees, as it is equal to the angle between the mirror and the incident ray. Angle of incidence is the angle between the incident ray and the normal to the surface at the point of incidence.
The angle between the mirror and the normal is called the angle of incidence. It is the angle formed between the incident ray (incoming light ray) and the normal (a line perpendicular to the surface of the mirror) at the point of incidence.
The angle of incidence of mirrors is the angle between the incident ray (incoming light ray) and the normal (perpendicular line) to the surface of the mirror at the point where the ray strikes the mirror.
It is 0 degrees.
The angle of incidence is the angle formed by the incident ray and the normal line drawn to the point of incidence on a mirror. It is measured from the incident ray to the normal line.
The beam of light that travels towards the mirror is called the incident ray.
When you shine a flashlight at a mirror, the ray of light that shines back at you is the ray of reflection, not incidence. The ray of incidence is the incoming ray of light that strikes the mirror. The ray of reflection is the outgoing ray that bounces off the mirror at an equal but opposite angle to the incident ray.
When a light beam is incident on a mirror, reflection occurs. The mirror surface reflects the light beam back in a predictable manner, following the law of reflection, where the angle of incidence is equal to the angle of reflection.
When a ray of light is directed at a mirror, it will reflect off the mirror's surface at an equal angle but in the opposite direction. This is known as the law of reflection. The angle of incidence, which is the angle between the incident ray and the normal to the mirror's surface, will be equal to the angle of reflection, which is the angle between the reflected ray and the normal.
The incident angle would also be 10 degrees since the angle of reflection is equal to the angle of incidence according to the law of reflection.
A convex mirror does not refract light; it reflects it. When an incident ray strikes a convex mirror, it reflects back in a way that obeys the law of reflection—angle of incidence equals angle of reflection. This creates a virtual image that appears behind the mirror.
The angle of incidence is 0 degrees for normal incidence, meaning the light ray hits the mirror perpendicularly. The angle of reflection is also 0 degrees, as the reflected ray will be in the same direction as the incident ray.