Understanding Refraction
Snell's law describes how a light ray bends when it moves from one transparent medium into another. The calculator helps you test that bend with controlled inputs. It is useful for class work, optics design, lens checks, aquarium viewing, prism work, and many geometry based refraction examples.
Why Index Matters
The law connects refractive index with angle size. A higher refractive index means light travels more slowly. When light enters a slower medium, the ray usually bends toward the normal line. When it enters a faster medium, it bends away from that line. The normal line is the imaginary line placed at ninety degrees to the surface.
Advanced Options
This tool can solve several missing values. You can find the refracted angle, the incident angle, or either refractive index. It can also estimate the critical angle when light travels from a denser optical medium to a less dense one. The Brewster angle option is included for advanced reflection study.
Accurate Angle Entry
Always measure angles from the normal, not from the surface. That point is the most common source of wrong answers. The calculator accepts degrees or radians, then shows both forms in the result. It also checks impossible cases. If the sine value is outside the valid range, no refracted ray exists. That condition indicates total internal reflection.
Wavelength and Speed
The wavelength option adds another useful layer. In a medium, wavelength becomes the vacuum wavelength divided by the refractive index. Frequency stays unchanged across the boundary. Speed also changes because it equals the speed of light divided by refractive index.
Practical Index Values
Use realistic refractive indexes for best results. Air is close to 1.0003. Water is about 1.333. Common glass is often near 1.5. Diamond is near 2.417. Real materials vary with wavelength, temperature, purity, and surface quality.
Review and Export
The output table is designed for quick review. It shows the inputs, computed angle, Snell invariant, speeds, wavelength changes, and optical warnings. You can export the result for notes or reports. This makes the calculator useful for repeatable homework, lab sheets, and engineering checks.
Because the inputs remain visible after calculation, you can change one variable and compare scenarios quickly. This is helpful when studying prisms, lenses, fibers, and layered materials. Small angle changes can reveal important design effects.