
Reflection (physics) - Wikipedia
Reflection of light is either specular (mirror-like) or diffuse (retaining the energy, but losing the image) depending on the nature of the interface.
Reflection of light - Science Learning Hub
Light reflects from a smooth surface at the same angle as it hits the surface. For a smooth surface, reflected light rays travel in the same direction. This is called specular reflection. For a …
Light - Reflection, Refraction, Physics | Britannica
Dec 29, 2025 · When light traveling in one transparent medium encounters a boundary with a second transparent medium (e.g., air and glass), a portion of the light is reflected and a portion …
Introduction to the Reflection of Light - Olympus
Reflection of light (and other forms of electromagnetic radiation) occurs when the waves encounter a surface or other boundary that does not absorb the energy of the radiation and …
Reflection of Light - GeeksforGeeks
Jul 23, 2025 · The phenomenon, known as "reflection" or "reflection of light," occurs when a light beam strikes any polished, smooth, or bright object and bounces back to our eyes.
Reflection and Refraction: Differences, Examples, Uses
Jul 6, 2025 · Reflection is the process by which light meets the surface of a medium and returns to that same medium. Thus, reflection is responsible for making any object visible to us.
Understanding Reflection of Light - BNS Institute
May 4, 2025 · Explore the science of light reflection: laws, types (specular & diffuse), mirrors, image formation, and real-world examples explained.
Physics Tutorial: Reflection and the Ray Model of Light
The ray nature of light is used to explain how light reflects off of planar and curved surfaces to produce both real and virtual images; the nature of the images produced by plane mirrors, …
9.2.1: Reflection - Physics LibreTexts
When a light ray strikes a reflecting surface, the angle of incidence (measured from the normal line) is equal to the angle of reflection (also measured from the normal line). This is called the …
Reflection - AMNH
Light can reflect in different ways, changing the way objects look. Light reflects more off light-colored surfaces than dark-colored ones. You also see different types of reflection when you …