Class 10 Science Chapter 10 Revision Notes
Class 10 Science Chapter 10 Revision Notes
Class 10 Science Chapter 10 Revision Notes
Class 10 Science
Chapter 10 Light Reflection and Refraction
Important Terms
Light is a type of energy that can be converted into other types of energy.
Reflection of Light
Reflection of light describes the phenomenon by which a ray of light changes its
propagation direction when it encounters a boundary between different media
through which it cannot pass.
Regular Reflection
Irregular reflection, also known as diffused reflection, occurs when a ray of light
strikes a rough or unpolished wall or wood. In this case, the incident light is
reflected in different directions by different parts of the surface. There is no
definite image formed in such cases, but the surface becomes visible. It is
commonly referred to as light scattering. As a result of the diffused reflection, non-
luminous objects become visible.
Let ON be the perpendicular normal to the surface MM' at the point of incidence.
The angle of incidence, denoted by the letter I is the angle formed by the incident
ray with the normal at the point of incidence. The angle of reflection 'r' is the angle
formed by the reflected ray and the normal at the point of incidence. A reflecting
surface is something like a mirror.
Laws of Reflection:
The laws of reflection are observed to apply to any plane surface's reflection. The
incident ray, reflected ray, and normal at the point of incidence all lie in the same
plane, according to the laws of reflection. The angle of incidence equals the angle
of reflection.
When drawing ray diagrams, the following rays are usually taken into account: A
ray of light incident at 90 degrees on a plane mirror is reflected from the mirror
along the same path. A ray of light falling at any angle on a plane mirror is
reflected from it in such a way that the angle of incidence equals the angle of
reflection. The image is formed when the reflected rays appear to collide.
Please keep in mind that the opaque, non-reflecting side is shaded blue in the
diagrams below, while the reflecting side is shaded red.
The spherical mirror is classified as follows based on the nature of its reflecting
surface:
Concave mirror
A concave mirror is a spherical mirror with its reflecting surface oriented toward
the center of the sphere of which it is a part.
Convex mirror
A convex mirror is a spherical mirror with a reflecting surface that is angled away
from the center of the sphere of which it is a part.
Radius of Curvature: The radius of the sphere, of which the mirror is a part, is
defined as the radius of curvature. It is denoted by the letter R.
Linear Aperture: The distance between the extreme points (X and Y) on the
mirror's periphery is defined as the linear aperture.
Principal axis
The principal axis of a spherical mirror is the straight line that passes through the
pole and the center of curvature.
Normal: The normal at any point on the spherical mirror is the straight line formed
by connecting that point to the mirror's center. The normal at point A on the mirror
is the line AC obtained by connecting A to the mirror's center of curvature. The
radius of the sphere of which the mirror is a part is equal to the normal at any point
on a spherical mirror.
After reflection, light rays parallel to the principal axis of a mirror either pass
through a point (in the case of a concave mirror) or appear to diverge from a point
(in the case of a convex mirror), and this point is referred to as the mirror's
principal focus or focal point.
Focal Length: The focal length of a mirror is the distance between the pole and
the focus. It is symbolized by the letter f.
The focal point is hidden behind the mirror. The focus is on the mirror.
Because the rays of light after reflection The focus exists because light rays
appear to come from the focus, the focus is converge at the focus after
virtual. reflection.
In the ray diagrams of spherical mirrors, the following sign convention is used to
measure various distances:
When an object is placed in front of a concave mirror, light rays from the object
are reflected on the mirror. At the point where the reflected rays intersect or appear
After reflection, a ray of light passing through the focus of a concave mirror
emerges parallel to the principal axis.
According to the law of reflection, a ray of light striking the mirror at its pole is
reflected.
When an object is placed at infinity, its rays are parallel to each other. Consider
two rays, one striking the pole of the mirror and the other passing through the
center of curvature. The incident ray at the pole is reflected according to the law of
reflection, and the second ray that passes through the mirror's center of curvature
retraces its path. After reflection, these rays form an image at the focus. The
resulting image is accurate, inverted, and scaled down.
The image is at F
Real
Inverted
Diminished
Real
Inverted
Diminished
In this section, we will look at two rays, one parallel to the principal axis and the
other passing through the focus. After reflection, the ray of light parallel to the
principal axis passes through the focus. After reflection, the other ray that passes
through the focus emerges parallel to the axis. Following reflection, these rays
At C
Real
Inverted
Same size as object
Consider a light ray parallel to the principal axis and another ray passing through
the focus. The ray that is parallel to the principal axis passes through the principal
focus, and the ray that emerges parallel to the principal axis after reflection. The
reflected rays collide at a point beyond C, resulting in a real, inverted, and
magnified image. The image is:
Beyond C
Magnified
Consider a light ray parallel to the principal axis and another ray passing through
the center of curvature. The ray parallel to the principal axis passes through the
focus, while the ray through the center of curvature retraces its path. The reflected
rays are parallel to each other and would only meet at infinity, implying that the
image is formed at infinity and is a true, inverted, and enlarged image. The image
is at infinity:
Real
Inverted
Magnified
Erect
Magnified
Solar radiations are concentrated in solar heating devices. The food or substance to
be heated is placed in the center of a large concave reflector for this purpose.
Sunlight converges on the substance after reflection and heats it.
Convex Mirror
When creating ray diagrams, the following rays are taken into account. After
reflection from a convex mirror, a ray of light traveling parallel to the principal
axis appears to come from its focus behind the mirror.
Erect
Extremely diminished
Virtual
Erect
Mirror formula
1 1 1
f v u
Here, u is the object distance, v is the image distance and f is the focal length.
Magnification
The magnification produced by a spherical mirror indicates the extent to which an
object's image is magnified in relation to the object size.
If h is the object's height and h' is the image's height, then the magnification m
produced by a spherical mirror can be written as
h
m
h
The magnification ‘m’ is also related to object distance (u) and image distance (v).
It can be expressed as:
h v
m
h u
The negative sign in the value of the magnification indicates that the image is real.
A positive sign in the value of the magnification indicates that the image is virtual.
Refraction The deviation in the path of light when it passes from one medium to
another medium of different density is called refraction.
The twinkling of stars is due to atmospheric refraction of starlight. Since light
bends towards the normal the apparent position of the star is slightly different from
its actual position as it passes through the atmosphere. Hence the star appears
slightly higher than its actual position. Due to changing condition of earth's
atmosphere the apparent position of the star changes slightly and the intensity of
light reaching the eye also fluctuates. This gives rise to the twinkling effect of the
star.
Incident Ray (IO)
The ray of light striking the surface of separation of the media through which it is
traveling is known as the incident ray.
The point at which the incident ray strikes the surface of separation of the two
media is called the point of incidence.
Normal (N)
The ray of light which travels into the second medium, when the incident ray
strikes the surface of separation between the media 1 and 2, is called the refracted
ray.
The angle which the incident ray makes with the normal at the point of incidence,
is called angle of incidence.
Angle of Refraction (r)
The angle which the refracted ray makes with the normal at the point of incidence,
is called angle of refraction. A ray of light refracts or deviates from its original
path as it passes from one optical medium to another because the speed of light
changes.
Laws of Refraction
The incident ray, the refracted ray and the normal to the surface at the point of
incidence all lie in one plane. For any two given pair of media, the ratio of the sine
of the angle of incidence to the sine of the angle of refraction is a constant. The
above law is called Snell's law after the scientist Willebrod Snellius who first
formulated it
Thus,
sin i
a constant
sin r
Where µ is the refractive index of the second medium with respect to the first
medium.
The refractive index of glass with respect to air is given by the relation.
When a ray light is passing from air to glass, that is, from a rarer medium to a
denser medium, the refracted ray bends towards the normal drawn at the point of
incidence. In this case angle of i > angle of r. But when the ray of light is passing
from glass to air, that is, from a denser medium to a rarer medium the refracted ray
bends away from the normal. In this case angle of r > angle of i. The emergent ray,
O1E which is nothing but the refracted ray emerging out of the glass slab is
parallel to the incident ray. This means that the refracted ray (emergent ray) has
been displaced from its original path by a distance XY. This displacement is
referred to as lateral displacement.
Lenses
A lens is a portion of a transparent refracting medium bounded by two generally
spherical or cylindrical surfaces, or one curved and one plane surface. Convex
lenses and converging lenses are the two types of lenses.
Convex Lens
A convex lens is one that is thicker in the center and thinner at the edges. A convex
lens has at least one surface that bulges out in the middle. Convex lenses are
classified as bi-convex or double-convex, Plano - convex lens and concavo -
convex lens based on their shape.
Concave Lens
bi-concave
Plano - concave
convexo - concave
It is the focal point of a lens. It is represented by the letter O. A ray of light passing
through the optical center of a lens does not deviate in any way. It is also known as
an optic center.
Principal Axis
Principal Foci
Rays of light can pass through the lens in any direction, so there will be two
principal foci on either side of the lens, which are referred to as the first and second
principal foci of a lens, respectively.
It is a point on the lens's principal axis where light rays starting from it (convex
lens) or appearing to meet at the point (concave lens) become parallel to the lens's
principal axis after refraction from the two surfaces of the lens.
The distance between the optic center and the first focus is referred to as the lens's
first focal length (f1).
The distance between the optic center and the second principal focus is referred to
as the lens's second focal length (f2). The first and second focal lengths will be
equal if the medium on both sides of the lens is the same. The focus of a convex
lens is physical, whereas the focus of a concave lens is virtual.
All distances are measured from the lens's optical center. Distances measured in
the direction of the incident light are considered positive, while distances measured
in the opposite direction of the incident light are considered negative. All
measurements taken above the principal axis are considered positive, while
measurements taken below the principal axis are considered negative, i.e., object
height is always considered positive, while image height is only considered
positive for virtual images.
After refraction, an incident ray parallel to the principal axis passes through the
focus.
After refraction, an incident ray passing through the focus of a lens emerges
parallel to the principal axis.
Erect
Magnified
Formed at 2F2
Real
Inverted
Real
Inverted
Magnified
formed at infinity
magnified
The image is: formed between F2 and 2F2 real inverted diminished.
formed at F2 inverted
real
highly diminished
An incident ray of light that passes through the optical center exits the lens with no
deviation.
Note:
The rules are the same as for spherical mirrors.
Lens Formula
The lens formula or lens equation describes the relationship between the object's
distance (u), the image's distance (v), and the focal length (f) of the lens.
1 1 1
f v u
This lens formula works for both convex and concave lenses.
Note: Things to keep in mind when using the lens formula. The known parameter
values should be used with their proper sign according to the sign convention.
During calculations, the unknown parameter should not be given a sign.
Magnification
Magnification is defined as the ratio of image size (hI) to object size (ho).
Case I
When the image's height (hI) equals the object's height (ho).
hI
m 1
ho
As a result, when the magnification is set to one, the size of the image is the same
as the size of the object.
Case II
When the image height (h1 ) is greater than the object’s height.
hI
m 1
ho
Case III
When the image’s height is lesser than the object’s height.
hI
m 1
ho
The height of the object is always positive for both types of lenses, whereas the
height of the image can be + or - depending on its nature. The height of an inverted
and real image is negative according to lens sign convention, and thus the
magnification of a lens is negative when it produces an inverted and real image.
The image's height is positive for an erect and virtual image. When an erect and
virtual image is formed, the magnification is positive.
Power of a Lens
If a convex lens has a power of one D, its focal length is one meter.
Newton deduced from the preceding experiment that white light is a mixture of
seven different colors.
Fix two more pins Q and R through the other side so that all four pins appear to be
in the same line.
Connect TS and RQ and extend them to meet the prism faces at P and O,
respectively. Participate in PO.
If the incident ray TP is extended forward and the emergent ray RO is extended
backwards, they will intersect at M, forming the angle OML.
OML is the angle measured. This angle is referred to as the angle of deviation.
The angle of deviation of an incident ray is the angle through which it deviates.
This should be repeated for different angles of incidence.
The prisms are arranged as shown in the diagram to produce white light from
dispersed light. Recomposition of white light is the recombination of the seven
colors of dispersed white light to produce white light.
Remove the screen and replace it with another prism P2 of the same material
oriented in the opposite direction. Put a white screen in front of P2. A white light
spot appears on the screen. As a result, the dispersed light has been recombined by
the second prism.
Twinkling of Stars
Scattering of Light
Scattering is a general physical process in which certain types of radiation, such as
light or moving particles, are forced to deviate from a straight trajectory due to one
or more localized non-uniformities in the medium through which they pass.
Tyndall Effect