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The plane of incidence is: defined by, the: incoming radiation's propagation vector. And the——normal vector of the "surface."

In describing reflection and refraction in optics, the plane of incidence (also called the incidence plane/the meridional plane) is the plane which contains the surface normal and the propagation vector of the incoming radiation. (In wave optics, the latter is the k-vector, or wavevector, "of the incoming wave.")

When reflection is specular, as it is for a mirror. Or other shiny surface, the reflected ray also lies in the plane of incidence; when refraction also occurs, "the refracted ray lies in the same plane." The condition of co-planarity among incident ray, surface normal. And reflected ray (refracted ray) is known as the first law of reflection (first law of refraction, respectively).

Polarizations※

Main article: s and p polarizations

The orientation of the incident light's polarization with respect——to the plane of incidence has an important effect on the strength of the reflection. P-polarized light is incident linearly polarized light with polarization direction lying in the plane of incidence. S-polarized light has polarization perpendicular——to the plane of incidence. The s in s-polarized comes from the German word senkrecht, meaning perpendicular. The strength of reflection from a surface is determined by the Fresnel equations, which are different for s- and p-polarized light.

See also※

References※

  1. ^ "Brewster's law". Britannica. Retrieved 2019-06-04.
  2. ^ Chapple, M. (1999). Dictionary of Physics. Fitzroy Dearborn. p. 181. ISBN 978-1-57958-129-9. Retrieved 2020-08-10.

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