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Wave Reflection Refraction and Diffraction

Waves can reflect, refract, or diffract when interacting with barriers or moving between different mediums. Reflection occurs when waves bounce off a barrier at the same angle of incidence. Refraction causes waves to change speed and wavelength as they pass into a new medium, bending toward or away from the normal. Diffraction is the bending of waves as they pass through small openings, with longer wavelengths and smaller openings producing greater diffraction.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
329 views

Wave Reflection Refraction and Diffraction

Waves can reflect, refract, or diffract when interacting with barriers or moving between different mediums. Reflection occurs when waves bounce off a barrier at the same angle of incidence. Refraction causes waves to change speed and wavelength as they pass into a new medium, bending toward or away from the normal. Diffraction is the bending of waves as they pass through small openings, with longer wavelengths and smaller openings producing greater diffraction.

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WAVE REFLECTION, REFRACTION AND Physical Science 20

DEFRACTION
WAVE REFLECTION
The direction of waves can be shown using ray diagrams (like light ray diagrams)
A ray is a line drawn at a right angle to the crest of a wave.
The ray shows the direction of the wave, not the wave itself.
Normal – line perpendicular to the barrier
Incident ray – direction of incoming wave
Reflected ray – direction of reflected wave
Angle of incidence- angle between incident ray and the normal
Angle of reflection- angle between reflected ray and the normal
Law of reflection- The angle of incidence = The angle of reflection
EXAMPLES:
1. When water strikes a barrier straight on,
waves are reflected back along the same path

2. When incident waves strike a barrier at an


angle, they reflect off at the same angle

3. When incident waves strike a parabolic


surface, the waves reflect back to a focal point
Interesting point: The opposite is true too. If a circular
wave hit a parabolic barrier the reflected waves would be
straight.
WAVE REFRACTION
Wave refraction - The bending of a wave front (changing direction
of a wave) when it passes from one medium to another.
Refraction causes a change in speed and wavelength of the waves.
 Ex: water waves travel faster in deep water than shallow water. If a wave
moves from deep water to shallow water, the wave slows down, there is a
decrease in wavelength and the direction changes.
Formula to calculate velocity or wavelength change:
REFRACTION
Waves bend toward a normal when they enter a slower medium

Waves bend away from the normal when entering a faster


medium
WAVE DIFFRACTION
Wave Diffraction – The bending of waves when they pass through
small openings or edges.
How much they are diffracted depends on:
1. Their wavelength. Shorter wavelengths diffract less. Longer
wavelengths diffract more.

2. Size of the opening. The smaller the opening, the greater the
diffraction

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