Snell's Law: Air to Glass at 30°
Light entering glass (n = 1.5) from air at 30° refracts to approximately 19.47°.
How to use this tool
- Enter refractive index n₁, angle of incidence θ₁ and refractive index n₂ in the fields above.
- Results update instantly as you type — or click Calculate.
- Read your angle of refraction θ₂ and the full breakdown beneath it.
This is the most common textbook Snell's Law example: light travelling from air (n=1) into standard glass (n=1.5) at a 30° angle of incidence.
Frequently asked questions
- What is total internal reflection?
- When light in a denser medium (e.g. glass) hits the boundary at an angle greater than the critical angle, all light is reflected back. This is the principle behind fibre-optic cables.
- What are common refractive indices?
- Vacuum/air: 1.0, water: 1.33, crown glass: 1.52, diamond: 2.42.