They are equal. Angle of incidence = Angle of reflection. This is the second law of reflection.
The angle is the same but on the other side of the perpendicular to the surface of the mirror at the point at which the light hits the mirror.
It reflects at like 45 degrees I think. No, it reflects off at the same angle it hits the mirror. If the light wave hits the mirror at a 30o angle on the left side, it will reflect off at a 30o angle on the right side. Scientists usually measure these angles from an imaginary line perpendicular to the mirror at the point where the light wave hits the reflecting surface; sounds awkward, but it makes the math easier.
If light hits a mirror at an angle it reflects back at you but it will make the image look bigger or smaller (if the mirror is concave or convex). If it is a flat plane mirror the image is the same but if your holding something it will be on the opposite side
When a light ray hits a surface at an angle (called the angle of incidence) and all or part of it is reflected at an angle (called the angle of reflection), the law of reflection states: the angle of reflection equals the angle of incidence. The angle is measured from an imaginary line drawn perpendicular to the surface at the point the ray hits the surface. what the hecka i dont understand this crap i hate math
Angle of incident is greatest when the light rays is almost parallel to the surface it hits.
The law of reflection states that when an object bounces off a flat surface, the angle it at which it hits the surface will be equal to the angle at which it bounces away.
When a beam of light strikes a reflective surface it reflects, angle of incidence = angle of reflection
The angle is the same but on the other side of the perpendicular to the surface of the mirror at the point at which the light hits the mirror.
mirror
It reflects at like 45 degrees I think. No, it reflects off at the same angle it hits the mirror. If the light wave hits the mirror at a 30o angle on the left side, it will reflect off at a 30o angle on the right side. Scientists usually measure these angles from an imaginary line perpendicular to the mirror at the point where the light wave hits the reflecting surface; sounds awkward, but it makes the math easier.
If light hits a mirror at an angle it reflects back at you but it will make the image look bigger or smaller (if the mirror is concave or convex). If it is a flat plane mirror the image is the same but if your holding something it will be on the opposite side
When a light ray hits a surface at an angle (called the angle of incidence) and all or part of it is reflected at an angle (called the angle of reflection), the law of reflection states: the angle of reflection equals the angle of incidence. The angle is measured from an imaginary line drawn perpendicular to the surface at the point the ray hits the surface. what the hecka i dont understand this crap i hate math
The way heat energy reflects off of Earth because of the angle at which it hits
40 DEGREES
40 degrees
Angle of incident is greatest when the light rays is almost parallel to the surface it hits.
The way heat energy reflects off of Earth because of the angle at which it hits