To investigate the reflection of light by a plane mirror.
Method
Set up a ray box, slit and lens so that a narrow ray of light is produced.
Place a 30 centimetre (cm) ruler near the middle of a piece of plain A3 paper. Draw a straight line parallel to its longer sides. Use a protractor to draw a second line at right angles to this line. Label this line with an ‘N’ for ‘normal’.
Place a plane mirrorA mirror with a flat, smooth, reflective surface. against the first line.
Use the ray box to shine a ray of light at the point where the normal meets the mirror. This is the incident rayLight ray moving towards a surface or boundary..
The angle between the normal and the incident ray is called the angle of incidenceAngle between the normal and the incident ray.. Move the ray box or paper to change the angle of incidence. The aim is to see a clear ray reflected from the surface of the mirror.
Using a pencil on the paper, mark the path of:
the incident ray with a cross
the reflected rayLight ray leaving a surface or boundary. with a cross
Remove the mirror. Join the crosses to show the paths of the light rays.
Measure the angle of incidence and angle of reflection for the mirror.
Repeat steps 2 - 8 for several different angles of incidence.
Results
Record results in a suitable table.
Attempt
Angle of incidence (°)
Angle of reflection (°)
1
35
35
2
16
...
3
...
...
Attempt
1
Angle of incidence (°)
35
Angle of reflection (°)
35
Attempt
2
Angle of incidence (°)
16
Angle of reflection (°)
...
Attempt
3
Angle of incidence (°)
...
Angle of reflection (°)
...
Analysis
Compare the angle of incidence with the angle of reflection for each block.
Evaluation
The light rays should obey the law of reflectionIn reflection at a surface, the angle of incidence equals the angle of reflection. for every attempt. To what extent do the results show this?
Risks/hazards
Hazard
Consequence
Control measures
Ray box gets hot
Minor burns
Do not touch bulb and allow time to cool
Semi-dark environment
Increased trip hazard
Ensure environment is clear of potential trip hazards before lowering lights
Hazard
Ray box gets hot
Consequence
Minor burns
Control measures
Do not touch bulb and allow time to cool
Hazard
Semi-dark environment
Consequence
Increased trip hazard
Control measures
Ensure environment is clear of potential trip hazards before lowering lights