I will Fan and medal whoever helps me with this! I Began working in it but started to get confused and i know its not math but for the past 2 years no one has really helped in any other subject 1. When examining the three media in the lab, which medium did you think would cause the most bending of light when the light passed through it? 2. Which medium caused the most bending of light as it passed through? The Diamond Caused the most. 3. How much the light is bending depends on what? 4. When light strikes the second medium, what are the two things that happen? Refraction and
these are the 3 pictures that go with
lol! It would not have taken you two years to get answered if you posted the question in the physics section.
1st question is refraction
Thank You i was kinda thinking that but i doubted that since it seemed so obvious so i wanted to see what other people thought
your welcome
want me to help you on the second question
for number 4 i knew obviously one was refraction but i couldnt think of a second one and why is number 2 wrong?
okay
what do you put for second one
The Diamond Caused the most.
what did you put for your answer
The Diamond Caused the most. if did got it wrong
oh
no i mean did you get it wrong?
frist off i think it's http://assets.openstudy.com/updates/attachments/5813448ae4b05a233feb4def-questionaskerduh1243-1477657849270-diamond.png because it bend the light most like an angle none of the other did that
i mean first
hold on
do you get it
yes thank you
@QuestionaskerDUH1243 okay
one sec brb
but on question 2 what answer you put in and did you get it wrong?
i didnt turn it in yet
oh
@mathmate help you in some questions
ok
wait
back
oki
I was thinking for number 3 The Surface that refracted it the most?
not the word refracted the proper word is on the tip of my tongue
Density. Moving from one medium to a medium of different density the light will bend to or away from the perpendicular. It happens when a wave form changes velocity due to the refracting medium's new density. The result is a change in direction (because it's entering the new medium on an angle). This occurs to any wave form but is visible with light, i.e. the "broken straw" effect.
got to do something real quick
STILL NEED HELP
sorry caps on
@QuestionaskerDUH1243
nope i ended up getting it
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