Practical Experiment - Reflection and Refraction
Practical Experiment - Reflection and Refraction
1 Place the concave lense in front of the light box (on the horizontal) and fill in the
table below.
8. Place the convex lense in front of the light box (on the horizontal) and fill in the
table below.
9. Place down the rectangular plane in front of the light box (on the diagonal) and fill
in the table below.
10.
Place the prism in front of the light box and fill in the table below.
Experiment 3.
1 Start with a convex lens and hold it close to your eye. Slowly move the lense away
from your face until your arm is completed outstretched. Record what you see in
the space below.
11.
Repeat the action for concave lenses and describe the difference between
the two lenses.
Results:
Experiment 1.
Top view
Concave
Reflect
Convex
Reflect
Plane
Experiment 2.
Top view
Refract
Lens. Convex
Refract
Lens. Concave
Both
Prism.
Both
Prism.
Discussion:
Question 1: Describe the difference between reflection and refraction based on what you
saw in your results.
Reflect is when it hits a surface then bounces back into another direction. Refraction is
when it passes through the object
Question 2: Describe the effect concave and convex lenses have on the light that passes
through them.
Concave is when the light curves inwards, as if it was inside a circle, where convex is
when its curved like the exterior of a circle.
Question 3. Does the distance from the object alter the way the light bends? Explain your
response.
Yes, because light fades the further it gets, and since it being reflected also fades, it
might be weaker, stronger however closer/farther the object is
Conclusion: (summarise the experiment, refer to and describe results, state if the
hypothesis was support or not and why and acknowledge any errors made and how they
could have impacted results).
In conclusion, the aim was to see whether a light reflects/refracts of a surface,
and whether its concave or convex, and how it varied according to the
different objects used. The only errors that couldve been made were however
far/close we placed the object for the light to shine upon, which couldve
affected the convex/concave decisions.