Skip to Content Skip to Header Navigation

Mission RL7 Converging vs. Diverging Lenses

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

Hold down the T key for 3 seconds to activate the audio accessibility mode, at which point you can click the K key to pause and resume audio. Useful for the Check Your Understanding and See Answers.

 The Question

The diagram shows an incident ray approaching a lens. Upon striking the lens this ray will ____.

 Physics Rules

Diverging Lenses - Rules of Refraction
Light refracts at any boundary - including those that bound a lens material - according to Snell's law. For diverging lenses, some generalizations can be made to simplify ray construction. They are:
  • An incident ray traveling parallel to the principal axis will refract and travel in a direction that is in line with the focal point on the original side of the lens.
  • An incident ray traveling toward the focal point located on the opposite side of the lens will refract and travel parallel to the principal axis.
  • An incident ray traveling through the exact center of the lens will refract upon entering the lens and upon leaving the lens and continue traveling in its original direction.

 Don't be Fooled

This diagram shows a ray of light that is passing through the focal point on its way toward a diverging lens. Many student incorrectly pick the answer "refract and pass parallel to the principal axis." If the lens were converging, this is exactly how it would behave. But don't be fooled! This is a diverging lens and there is no simple rule predicting how such a ray will behave for a diverging lens. Review your rules of refraction in the Know the Law section.

 Think About It

Certain rays of light refract through a diverging lens in a rather predictable manner. The behavior of these rays - known as principal rays - are of vital importance. You should quickly become familiar with the rules for how these rays refract. Give attention to details as you ponder the rules. See Know the Law section.

Return to Screen Reader Navigation