Papers by Simran Chourasia

Student Journal of Physics, 2018
Mirage forms when light rays traversing a medium with spatially varying refractive index bend and... more Mirage forms when light rays traversing a medium with spatially varying refractive index bend and undergo total internal reflection. Typical example is when downward going light rays bend upward when heated air in contact with hot earth surface leads to vertical gradient of refractive index with refractive index increasing in upward direction. A conceptual issue arises when considering the part of the light trajectory where light ray becomes horizontal. With refractive index varying only in the vertical direction, one will expect from symmetry considerations that a horizontal ray should not bend, contrary to the observed phenomenon of mirage. This issue has been discussed in literature, e.g. by Raman and Pancharatnam and by Berry. We discuss their arguments and argue that there are subtle conceptual issues in understanding mirage strictly in the framework of geometrical optics. In particular, we consider a horizontally moving light ray and argue that within geometrical optics, such a ray should continue to move horizontally. Bending of such a ray, as required by the mirage phenomenon, must require considerations of wave nature of light.
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Papers by Simran Chourasia