The portion of a light ray that falls on a surface is incident ray.
The ray of incidence is the light ray hitting the mirror plane and the ray bouncing off is the reflection ray. An incident ray is a ray of light that strikes a surface. The angle between this ray and the perpendicular or normal to the surface is the angle of incidence
A ray of light which strikes the surface is called incident ray and a surface which is reflected is called a reflected ray
Reflected ray
REFLECTION... (this is the right answer for: A ray of light strikes a flat surface of water. The angle that the reflected light ray makes with the normal is called the angle of? )if not incident ray.
A normal line is the name of the line drawn perpendicular to the surface where a light ray strikes.
The portion of a light ray that falls on a surface is incident ray.
it reflects
The ray which hits or falls on a object or a material initially is known as INCIDENT RAY. The ray which gets reflected after hitting the object is known as REFLECTED RAY.
incident ray
It does.
The ray of incidence is the light ray hitting the mirror plane and the ray bouncing off is the reflection ray. An incident ray is a ray of light that strikes a surface. The angle between this ray and the perpendicular or normal to the surface is the angle of incidence
A ray of light which strikes the surface is called incident ray and a surface which is reflected is called a reflected ray
Reflected ray
REFLECTION... (this is the right answer for: A ray of light strikes a flat surface of water. The angle that the reflected light ray makes with the normal is called the angle of? )if not incident ray.
incident ray-the light ray striking a reflecting surface is called the incident ray. reflected ray-the light ray obtained after reflection from the surface, in the same medium in which the incident ray is travelling , is called the reflected ray.
I think you would have to say that it does ... the portion that's not absorbed is bent exactly 180 degrees from its original path. The result of perpendicular incidence is perfectly consistent with the general rule of reflection that says the angle of reflection is equal to the angle of incidence. In the case where the ray of light falls perpendicularly on the reflecting surface, the angle of incidence ... the angle between the arriving path and the normal ... is zero, and so is the angle of reflection. So what's the problem ?
A normal line is the name of the line drawn perpendicular to the surface where a light ray strikes.