Total Internal Reflection in Prism - Interactive Simulation

Total Internal Reflection in Prism

Interactive demonstration of critical angle conditions and TIR physics in optical prisms

Ray Control

Real-time Physics Calculations

Incident Angle (i₁): 29.75°
Refracted Angle (r₁): 19.00°
Second Face Angle (r₂): 41.00°
Critical Angle: 41.00°

Snell's Law Applications:

First Face: sin(29.75°) = 1.524 × sin(19.00°)
Prism Geometry: A = r₁ + r₂ → 60° = 19.00° + 41.00°
TIR Condition: r₂ = 41.00° = Critical Angle → TIR OCCURS

Physics Insights

Total Internal Reflection

Critical Angle θc = 41.0°
When light traveling from denser medium (prism, μ=1.524) to rarer medium (air, μ=1) hits the interface at an angle greater than or equal to the critical angle, total internal reflection occurs.

Prism Geometry Constraint

A = r₁ + r₂ = 60°
In a prism, the sum of refraction angles at both faces equals the apex angle. This geometric constraint determines the ray path through the prism.

Sequential Snell's Law

First Face: n₁sin(i₁) = n₂sin(r₁)
Second Face: n₂sin(r₂) ≥ n₁sin(90°)
The critical condition occurs when the ray just reaches the critical angle at the exit face.

Textbook Problem Solution

Current Status: Ray undergoes total internal reflection at the second face. The incident angle of 29.75° creates the exact condition for TIR at the exit face.

Step-by-Step Solution

Step 1: Find Critical Angle

Given: μ = 1.524, air = 1.0
Critical Angle: sin(θc) = 1/1.524 = 0.6562
Result: θc = 41.0°

Step 2: Apply Prism Geometry

Constraint: A = r₁ + r₂ = 60°
For TIR: r₂ = 41° (critical angle)
Therefore: r₁ = 60° - 41° = 19°

Step 3: First Face Snell's Law

Apply: sin(i₁) = μ × sin(r₁)
Calculate: sin(i₁) = 1.524 × sin(19°)
Result: i₁ = 29.75°

Verification

Check: All conditions satisfied
Geometry: ✓ A = r₁ + r₂
TIR: ✓ r₂ = θc
Answer: i₁ = 29.75° for just TIR

Applications of Total Internal Reflection

Optical Fibers

Light signals travel through fiber optic cables using TIR to prevent signal loss, enabling high-speed internet and telecommunications.

Prism-based Instruments

Binoculars, periscopes, and total internal reflection microscopes use prisms to redirect light paths efficiently.

Diamond Brilliance

The high refractive index of diamond (n≈2.4) creates multiple internal reflections, giving diamonds their characteristic sparkle.

Refractometry

Critical angle measurements are used to determine refractive indices of unknown substances in analytical chemistry.

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