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A vessel of depth d is filled upto a depth of d1 by a liquid of refractive index n1 upto a depth of d2 by a liquid of refractive index n2 and upto a depth of d3 by a liquid of refractive index n3. - Physics (Theory)

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प्रश्न

A vessel of depth d is filled upto a depth of d1 by a liquid of refractive index n1 upto a depth of d2 by a liquid of refractive index n2 and upto a depth of d3 by a liquid of refractive index n3. Show that the apparent depth of the vessel when viewed normally is given by:

`h_(app) = (d_1/n_1 + d_2/n_2 + d_3/n_3)`

[here d = d1 + d2 + d3 and n1 > n2 > n3]

दीर्घउत्तर
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उत्तर

When light travels from a denser medium to a rarer one, it bends away from the normal. Due to this bending (refraction), submerged objects appear to be at a shallower depth than they actually are. This is called apparent depth.

If a vessel is filled with three transparent liquids of refractive indices n1 > n2 > n3 and respective depths d1, d2, and d3​, each layer contributes an apparent thickness when viewed normally from above.

Using the relation for a single medium:

Apparent depth = `"Real depth"/"Refractive index"`

So for all three layers:

`h_(app) = (d_1/n_1 + d_2/n_2 + d_3/n_3)`

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पाठ 15: Refraction of Light at a Plane Interface : Total Internal Reflection : Optical Fibre - QUESTIONS [पृष्ठ ७८१]

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नूतन Physics Part 1 and 2 [English] Class 12 ISC
पाठ 15 Refraction of Light at a Plane Interface : Total Internal Reflection : Optical Fibre
QUESTIONS | Q 3. | पृष्ठ ७८१
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