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Science & Technology
What is a Reflection?
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<blockquote data-quote="Beholder" data-source="post: 237447" data-attributes="member: 14640"><p>Reflection is when the light is repulsed to bounce from the surface's forcefield. A mirror can appear entirely flat despite atoms being round, by merging many such diffuse fields next to each other. For gas, the reflection and refraction is scattered in all directions, giving clouds a diffuse look.</p><p></p><p>For total reflections, light was already inside of the material and does not have a steep enough exit angle to escape. When inside of a material, most of the space consists of nothing, held apart using strong forces.</p><p></p><p>Refraction is when the light is pulled into the transparent material. Causing lens magnification, prisms, rainbows... Because light is already at maximum speed, the curve bends as if the speed increases internally, but it's the same speed of light to an outside observer.</p><p></p><p>This explanation is a bit simplified, excluding spin, colors, wavelengths, polarization and quantum effects. Real light behaves as both waves and particles, because stopping makes it go away from just being energy.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Beholder, post: 237447, member: 14640"] Reflection is when the light is repulsed to bounce from the surface's forcefield. A mirror can appear entirely flat despite atoms being round, by merging many such diffuse fields next to each other. For gas, the reflection and refraction is scattered in all directions, giving clouds a diffuse look. For total reflections, light was already inside of the material and does not have a steep enough exit angle to escape. When inside of a material, most of the space consists of nothing, held apart using strong forces. Refraction is when the light is pulled into the transparent material. Causing lens magnification, prisms, rainbows... Because light is already at maximum speed, the curve bends as if the speed increases internally, but it's the same speed of light to an outside observer. This explanation is a bit simplified, excluding spin, colors, wavelengths, polarization and quantum effects. Real light behaves as both waves and particles, because stopping makes it go away from just being energy. [/QUOTE]
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What is a Reflection?
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