Yes, the angle of incidence always equals the angle of reflection when a straight ray of light hits a mirror that isn't bent.
If a light ray is reflected from a flat mirror with a reflection angle of 55o then the angle of incidence was also 55o. When reflecting from a mirrored surface, the angle of incidence equals the angle of reflection.
30 degrees as the angle of reflection is equal to the angle of incidence
96 degress? If the light ray is straight, and if the mirror isn't bent, then the angle of reflection is exactly 48 degrees, the same number of degrees as the angle of incidence. That's the law of reflection.
they are equal
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.
angle of incidence is equal to angle of reflection.
Both are zero. Thereby it obeys the second law of reflection ie angle of incidence is equal to angle of reflection.
No, if the mirror is flat (a plane), the angle of incidence always equals the angle of reflection.
If a light ray is reflected from a flat mirror with a reflection angle of 55o then the angle of incidence was also 55o. When reflecting from a mirrored surface, the angle of incidence equals the angle of reflection.
30 degrees as the angle of reflection is equal to the angle of incidence
96 degress? If the light ray is straight, and if the mirror isn't bent, then the angle of reflection is exactly 48 degrees, the same number of degrees as the angle of incidence. That's the law of reflection.
they are equal
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 of reflection is equal to the angle of incidence. In the "diagram" below the line pointing up is perpendicular to the horizontal line. The horizontal line is something like a mirror. | | ____________|_________ Now if a light wave was to hit the mirror where the two lines cross then the angle of incidence is the angle between the light wave and the perpendicular line. The angle of reflection will be the same angle only in the opposite rotation to the perpendicular
The angle of reflection (θr) off a planar surface (eg. mirror) is equal to the angle of incidence (θi) on that surface. They are measured with respect to the normal, which is an imaginary line drawn perpendicular to the surface. Or, in simpler terms, the angle of reflection is the same as the angle of incidence.
The angle of incidence is ALWAYS equal to the angle of reflection! This is one of the laws of reflection.
The angle of incidence