A plane polarized blue light ray is incident
Question : A plane polarized blue light ray is incident on a prism such that there is no reflection from the surface of the prism. The angle of deviation of the emergent ray is 𝛿 = 60° (see Figure-1). The angle of minimum deviation for red light from the same prism is 𝛿min = 30° (see Figure-2). The refractive index of the prism material for blue light is √3. Which of the following statement(s) is (are) correct ?
(A) The blue light is polarized in the plane of incidence.
(B) The angle of the prism is 45°.
(C) The refractive index of the material of the prism for red light is √2.
(D) The angle of refraction for blue light in air at the exit plane of the prism is 60°.
[JEE Advanced 2023 Paper 1 Online]
Solution :-
For blue light, they say “no reflection occurs,” which implies that the angle of incidence is Brewster’s angle — because at Brewster’s angle, all light is transmitted, especially when the incident light is already plane polarized.
Brewster’s Law says:
tan ip = μ
where ip is the Brewster’s angle and μ is the refractive index of the denser medium with respect to air.
Brewster’s law tells us that when the angle of incidence is equal to Brewster’s angle, the reflected and refracted rays are perpendicular, and reflected light is fully polarized.
🌟 When incident light is already plane polarized, and its polarization direction is parallel to the plane of incidence, and it hits the surface at Brewster’s angle, then the reflected ray vanishes completely. This is why there is no reflected ray in figure-1.
Now for blue light :
⇒ ip = 60°
Hence blue light is incident at an angle of incidence i1 = 60°.
Applying Snell’s Law at first interface,
⇒ r1 = 30°
Now deviation,
Now applying Snell’s Law at second interface,
⇒ A = 60°
⇒ i1 = A = 60°
Till now Options (A) and (D) are correct and Option (B) is wrong.
Now for Red Light :
Using prism formula,
⇒ μred = √2
Hence option (C) is also correct.