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Posted

Hello,
Can somebody help me?
Light enters an optical fiber(ideal glass optical fiber without cladding or buffer)at the normally cleaved end.

How calculate the greatest angle of incidence I that will result in total internal reflection of the light?

I know Snell's Law and refraction Law and I have found 21 or 42 degrees but that don't seem correct...

Thanks.

 

Posted

Snell's law is the right method. What is happening if you don't have total internal reflection? Maybe if you showed how you got 21 or 42 degrees, it would help?

Posted

ni.sini=n2.sinr (I=incident,r=refracted)

so 1.sini=1.5.sinr

so sini/sinr=1.5 I>r

into glass 90-r=critical angle and then?


I think it is 50 degrees


No sorry 90-50=40 degrees

Posted

That works for if you are inside the glass and the outside is air or vacuum (and arcsin of 1/1.5 = 0.667 is 41.8 degrees) but the question you asked was for the angle of light incident into the fiber via the cleaved end. It looks to me like you need to apply snell's law twice — once for the light entering, and one for the TIR for not exiting the sides.

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