| Kazimierz Siemienowicz - 1729 - 494 pages
...according to the Nature of the Rays of all Luminous Bodies, with whom (as we are taught by Optics) the Angle of Reflection is always equal to the Angle of Incidence. Wherefore all the Rays in general being confined and refifted by the Body they would project, and having... | |
| Francis Holliday - 1749 - 360 pages
...the fides of the figure b, myn,p'y and A, 2, 3, 4, A, will be the path of the moving body A, becaufe the angle of reflection is always equal to the angle of incidence, and the center of the ball, perpendicular to the point of contract ; hence by drawing 2 F, 3 G and... | |
| George Adams - 1794 - 734 pages
...that is, either perpendicularly or obliquely; and experience has proved, that when light is reflected, the angle of reflection is always equal to the angle of incidence. Thus, fuppofe ab, jig. 25, pi. i, to be the furface of a plane mirror, If a ray of light fc falls perpendicularly... | |
| Leonhard Euler - 1802 - 546 pages
...equal to B' MP, and the angle A mw, equal to the angle B m P. Toil This property is thus enounced : The angle of reflection is always equal to the angle of incidence. I have already taken notice of this ftriking property ; but my defign, at prefent, is to fhew what... | |
| Henry Robertson (M.D.) - 1808 - 452 pages
...through a stratum more rare. The rays of light are likewise capable of being reflected from bodies; and the angle of reflection is always equal to the angle of incidence. A ray is said to be perfectly reflected, when the whole of it is again thrown out, either as it struck... | |
| Friedrich Christian Accum - 1808 - 428 pages
...without coming into contact with the matter which repels it. The ray is then said to be reflected. The angle of reflection is always equal to the angle of incidence. EXPERIMENT II. To prove that the angle of refection is equal to the angle of incidence. There are several... | |
| William Nicholson - 1809 - 734 pages
...anil called looking-glasses. The doctrine of mirrours depends wholly on that fundamental law, that the angle of reflection is always equal to the angle of incidence. See OPTICS. Parallel rays falling directly on a plan« speculum are reflected back upon themselves;... | |
| Jeremiah Joyce - 1809 - 290 pages
...reflected ray? Charks. Since cb is perpendicular to the glass at b, the angle of incidence is abc; and as the angle of reflection is always equal to the angle of incidence, I must make another angle, as cbm, equal to abc*, : : .«'! v and then the line fy tfi is that in which... | |
| John Dougall - 1810 - 684 pages
...angle, equal to that formed with the same body, by the original impinging ray ; or, in other words, the angle, of reflection is always equal to the angle of incidence. Thus, if the original ray fall perpendicularly on the reflecting body, the reflected ray will return in a... | |
| Thomas Thomson - 1810 - 372 pages
...elastic ball were made to strike obliquely ajcainst the ground. The ray is then said to be reflected. The angle of reflection is always equal to the angle of incidence. When a ray of light passes within a certain distance of another body, it is bent to-iciirda it ; at... | |
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