If light is incident of a convex lens, light will meet at the focal point, on the other side of the lens.
In case of concave lens, light will be diverged.
Convex and concave lens are very important in study of optics.
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∙ 14y agoWhen light hits a lens, it can either be reflected, absorbed, or refracted. The way light behaves when it hits a lens depends on the material of the lens and the angle at which the light is incident. Lenses are designed to refract light in specific ways to focus or deflect the light for various optical applications.
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∙ 15y agohello my name is destiny
When light hits a convex lens, it refracts towards the center of the lens. This causes the light rays to converge at a point known as the focal point. Depending on the position of the object relative to the lens, it can form either a real or virtual image.
A converging lens bends light inward and focuses it at a point. When the light hits your eye, the image of the object is magnified, making the object appear larger than its actual size.
When light rays enter a concave lens, they diverge or spread out due to the shape of the lens. The lens causes the light rays to refract, so they do not come together at a single point like with a convex lens. This spreading out of light rays is what makes concave lenses useful for correcting myopia or nearsightedness.
In a concave lens, the parallel rays of light diverge or spread out after passing through the lens. This causes them to appear to come from a point called the focal point on the same side of the lens as the light source.
When the curvature of a lens is larger, the focal point moves closer to the lens. This means the lens has a shorter focal length and will converge light rays at a point closer to the lens.
light bends when it hits the lens....this is called refraction
When light hits a convex lens, it refracts towards the center of the lens. This causes the light rays to converge at a point known as the focal point. Depending on the position of the object relative to the lens, it can form either a real or virtual image.
sh@@ happens
The light refracts or bend .
The light is delayed longer by the thicker part of the lens than by the thinner part of the lens. This results in the following:convex lens, light rays bend towards the axis of the lensconcave lens, light rays bend away from the axis of the lens
Alot happens when you put a lense into a beam of light.
A converging lens bends light inward and focuses it at a point. When the light hits your eye, the image of the object is magnified, making the object appear larger than its actual size.
When light rays enter a concave lens, they diverge or spread out due to the shape of the lens. The lens causes the light rays to refract, so they do not come together at a single point like with a convex lens. This spreading out of light rays is what makes concave lenses useful for correcting myopia or nearsightedness.
When they are entering a concave lens they are refracted and bend away from each other.
What some people call Transitions, a registered trademark, lens are designed and built to react to light levels. Low light the lens stay transparent, when bright light hits the lens the way the lens are made makes the lens change to the apropriate level of dark in a fraction of a second.
In a concave lens, the parallel rays of light diverge or spread out after passing through the lens. This causes them to appear to come from a point called the focal point on the same side of the lens as the light source.
Most of the light rays that strike a convex lens converge, or come together, at a focal point. This is due to the lens shape and the way it refracts light.