yes
The angle of incidence is equal to the angle of reflection. Therefore, if the angle between the incident and reflected rays is 60 degrees, the angle of incidence is also 60 degrees.
yes
Incident Ray and Reflected ray
Incident rays are incoming rays of light that strike a surface, while reflected rays are rays of light that bounce off that surface after the collision. The angle at which the incident ray approaches the surface is equal to the angle at which the reflected ray leaves the surface, according to the law of reflection.
Angle of incident is greatest when the light rays is almost parallel to the surface it hits.
The light rays that leave a mirror are called reflected rays. They are the result of light bouncing off the mirror's surface at an equal angle to the incident angle.
The angle of incidence equals the angle of reflection. Therefore, if your angle of incidence is 15 degrees, your angle of reflection equals that also. If it is 45 degrees, your angle of reflection is also 45 degrees, and so on.
It transforms incident rays (say, from the Sun) of white light [that contains almost every light frequency] into, by Refraction, a Rainbow. Please ask next - What are the main Astronomical uses of the Prism.
The light rays gets reflected in the same angle. Angle between normal and the incident ray is called angle of incident and angle between normal and reflected ray is called angle of relection. Normal is an imagenary perpendicular line on the reflecting surface. Angle of incidence is alway equal to angle of reflection.
radioactive
Two intersecting rays form an angle. Without two rays you do not have an angle.
When a ray of light is incident normally on a plane mirror, the angle between the incident ray and the reflected ray is 0 degrees. This means that the reflected ray will travel back along the same path as the incident ray, creating a symmetry in the reflection process.