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Internal Reflection
Excerpt from Field Guide to Spectroscopy
When light enters a medium that has a lower index of refraction, Snell's law indicates that the light refracts so that it makes a greater angle with respect to the normal.
As the incoming ray increases its angle with respect to the normal, the outgoing ray in the second medium increases its angle also, and at some point reaches 90o.
At this particular value of θ1, the angle of refraction is ≥90o and the light does not leave the first medium. This is total internal reflection. The critical angle θc at which total internal reflection will occur is given by the expression
Not only is total internal reflection important in fiber optics transmission and polarizers, but a form of spectroscopy—attenuated total reflectance (ATR) spectroscopy—is based on this phenomenon.
D. W. Ball, Field Guide to Spectroscopy, SPIE Press, Bellingham, WA (2006).
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