Reflectivity isn't a property of light, it's a property of the surface that reflects the light. It is the proportion of the energy in an incoming light beam which when it hits the surface is reflected rather than absorbed.
A light bulb provides light through emission of photons due to electrical energy, and is not directly related to reflection or refraction. However, when light emitted by the bulb interacts with a mirror, it undergoes reflection, while when it passes through a lens or prism, it undergoes refraction.
Refraction occurs when light changes speed and direction as it passes from one medium to another, such as from air to water. Reflection, on the other hand, is when light bounces off the surface of a material, like a mirror, and changes direction. Refraction involves a change in speed and direction, while reflection involves a change in direction only.
Yes, there is a distinction between light reflection and light refraction. Reflection occurs when light bounces off a surface, changing direction but not wavelength. Refraction, on the other hand, happens when light enters a different medium and changes direction and speed, bending as it passes from one medium to another.
reflection is when light its something like a mirror and refraction is light going through something solid that is not like a mirror when light falls on a surface and bounces back, it is reflection and when light is absorbed by the surface or passes through the surface but does not bounces back, it is refraction.
Light follows the Law of Sines in refraction and reflection' sin(I)/VI = sin(T)/VT=sin(R)=VI.
Reflection of light is the bending of light from its point. while refraction is the diverging of light from its bearing.
REFLECTION: IF a light ray in incident on a surface if it bring back to same medium is called reflection REFRACTION: IF a light ray in incident on a surface and going to another medium is called reflection and there is a a law for refraction that is SNELL'S LAW
A light bulb provides light through emission of photons due to electrical energy, and is not directly related to reflection or refraction. However, when light emitted by the bulb interacts with a mirror, it undergoes reflection, while when it passes through a lens or prism, it undergoes refraction.
Reflection is for the light rays to bounce, and refraction is for the light rays to bend. maybe not equally, but enough to bend or bounce.
Reflection is for the light rays to bounce, and refraction is for the light rays to bend. maybe not equally, but enough to bend or bounce.
Refraction and reflection are both processes that involve the bending of light. Reflection occurs when light bounces off a surface, while refraction occurs when light passes through a medium and changes speed, causing it to bend. Both phenomena are fundamental principles of optics.
reflection is when it is reflected; it bounces of the surface while refraction is when it is bent but not reflected
Absorb.Absorb.Reflecting is when something (e.g. light) bounces off an object; abosrbing is when it is taken into it.
In reflection the light bounces bach; in refraction the light passes through, but is bent at the interface.
No, light bending through a prism is an example of refraction, not reflection. Refraction occurs when light passes through a medium with a different refractive index, causing the light to change direction. Reflection, on the other hand, occurs when light bounces off a surface.
Refraction occurs when light changes speed and direction as it passes from one medium to another, such as from air to water. Reflection, on the other hand, is when light bounces off the surface of a material, like a mirror, and changes direction. Refraction involves a change in speed and direction, while reflection involves a change in direction only.
Reflection involves the bouncing back of light when it hits a surface, following the law of reflection that the angle of incidence equals the angle of reflection. Refraction, on the other hand, is the change in direction of light when it passes from one medium to another, caused by the change in speed of light.