NCERT Solutions for Class 12 Physics Chapter 9: Ray Optics and Optical Instruments

These Class 12 Physics Chapter 9 solutions cover Ray Optics and Optical Instruments from the NCERT textbook (session 2026–27). Every NCERT “Exercises” question (9.1–9.31) is reproduced verbatim and solved step by step, with each numerical worked out and cross-checked against the official answer key with correct units. You also get key formulae, extra practice, MCQs, Assertion–Reason questions, exam tips and FAQs.

Class: 12 Subject: Physics Chapter: 9 Name: Ray Optics and Optical Instruments Exercises: 9.1 – 9.31 Session: 2026–27

Class 12 Physics Chapter 9 – Overview

Chapter 9, Ray Optics and Optical Instruments, treats light as a bundle of straight-line rays and uses this picture to study reflection by spherical mirrors, refraction through plane and spherical surfaces and lenses, total internal reflection, dispersion by a prism, and the working of optical instruments (simple and compound microscopes, refracting and reflecting telescopes). The whole chapter rests on the Cartesian sign convention and two master relations — the mirror equation and the thin-lens equation — together with the lens maker’s formula. The exercises are mostly numericals on image location, magnification, refractive index, critical angle and magnifying power, plus a few reasoning questions on image properties and instrument design.

Key Concepts & Definitions

Cartesian sign convention: all distances are measured from the pole/optical centre; distances in the direction of incident light are positive, against it negative; heights above the principal axis are positive.

Real vs virtual image: a real image is formed where rays actually meet (can be caught on a screen); a virtual image only appears to be formed (cannot be projected).

Refractive index (n): ratio of speed of light in vacuum to that in the medium; for a pair of media, sin i / sin r = n21 (Snell’s law).

Critical angle (ic): the angle of incidence in the denser medium for which the angle of refraction is 90°; for i > ic total internal reflection occurs, with sin ic = 1/n.

Power of a lens (P): P = 1/f (f in metres); SI unit dioptre (D), 1 D = 1 m−1; positive for converging, negative for diverging.

Magnifying power: the ratio of the angle subtended at the eye by the image to that subtended by the object (placed at the near point) — the figure of merit for microscopes and telescopes.

Important Formulae

Mirror equation: 1/v + 1/u = 1/f   and   f = R/2

Magnification (mirror): m = h′/h = −v/u

Snell’s law: n1 sin i = n2 sin r   ;   apparent depth = real depth / n

Critical angle: sin ic = n2/n1 (rarer 2, denser 1)

Refraction at a spherical surface: n2/v − n1/u = (n2 − n1)/R

Thin-lens equation: 1/v − 1/u = 1/f   ;   m = v/u

Lens maker’s formula: 1/f = (n − 1)(1/R1 − 1/R2)

Lenses in contact: 1/f = 1/f1 + 1/f2 + … ; P = P1 + P2 + …

Prism: A = r1 + r2 ; δ = i + e − A ; n = sin[(A + Dm)/2] / sin(A/2)

Simple microscope: m = 1 + D/f (image at D); m = D/f (image at infinity)

Compound microscope: m = (L/fo)(D/fe) [image at infinity], with eyepiece factor (1 + D/fe) for near point

Telescope: m = fo/fe (normal); m = (fo/fe)(1 + fe/D) (image at D); length = fo + fe

NCERT Exercises (9.1–9.31) – Solutions

Questions are reproduced exactly as in the NCERT textbook; all answers are original and every numerical is verified with units against the NCERT answer key.

9.1 A small candle, 2.5 cm in size is placed at 27 cm in front of a concave mirror of radius of curvature 36 cm. At what distance from the mirror should a screen be placed in order to obtain a sharp image? Describe the nature and size of the image. If the candle is moved closer to the mirror, how would the screen have to be moved?

SOLUTION Given: h = 2.5 cm, u = −27 cm, R = −36 cm, so f = R/2 = −18 cm. Mirror equation: 1/v + 1/u = 1/f → 1/v = 1/f − 1/u = (−1/18) − (−1/27) = −1/18 + 1/27. LCM 54: 1/v = (−3 + 2)/54 = −1/54, so v = −54 cm. The screen must be placed 54 cm in front of the mirror (same side as the object). Magnification m = −v/u = −(−54)/(−27) = −2, so image size = |m| × 2.5 = 5.0 cm. The image is real, inverted and magnified (5.0 cm). As the candle moves towards f (18 cm), v → ∞, so the screen must be moved farther from the mirror; for u < f the image becomes virtual and cannot be caught on a screen.

9.2 A 4.5 cm needle is placed 12 cm away from a convex mirror of focal length 15 cm. Give the location of the image and the magnification. Describe what happens as the needle is moved farther from the mirror.

SOLUTION Given: h = 4.5 cm, u = −12 cm, f = +15 cm (convex). 1/v = 1/f − 1/u = 1/15 + 1/12 = (4 + 5)/60 = 9/60, so v = 60/9 = 6.7 cm (behind the mirror ⇒ virtual, erect). Magnification m = −v/u = −(6.7)/(−12) = +0.56 = 5/9; image size = (5/9) × 4.5 = 2.5 cm (diminished). As the needle is moved farther away (u → ∞), v → f (image moves towards the focus but never beyond it) while the magnification m → 0, so the image keeps shrinking.

9.3 A tank is filled with water to a height of 12.5 cm. The apparent depth of a needle lying at the bottom of the tank is measured by a microscope to be 9.4 cm. What is the refractive index of water? If water is replaced by a liquid of refractive index 1.63 up to the same height, by what distance would the microscope have to be moved to focus on the needle again?

SOLUTION n = real depth / apparent depth = 12.5 / 9.4 = 1.33. For the new liquid, apparent depth = real depth / n = 12.5 / 1.63 = 7.67 cm. Shift in apparent position = 9.4 − 7.67 = 1.7 cm. Since the new apparent depth is smaller, the microscope must be moved down by about 1.7 cm to refocus.

9.4 Figures 9.27(a) and (b) show refraction of a ray in air incident at 60° with the normal to a glass-air and water-air interface, respectively. Predict the angle of refraction in glass when the angle of incidence in water is 45° with the normal to a water-glass interface [Fig. 9.27(c)].

SOLUTION From Fig. (a): air→glass, i = 60°, r = 35° ⇒ nga = sin 60°/sin 35° = 0.866/0.574 = 1.51. From Fig. (b): air→water, i = 60°, r = 47° ⇒ nwa = sin 60°/sin 47° = 0.866/0.731 = 1.32. Refractive index of glass with respect to water: ngw = nga/nwa = 1.51/1.32 = 1.144. For water→glass with i = 45°: sin r = sin 45° / ngw = 0.7071/1.144 = 0.6181, so r ≈ 38°.

9.5 A small bulb is placed at the bottom of a tank containing water to a depth of 80 cm. What is the area of the surface of water through which light from the bulb can emerge out? Refractive index of water is 1.33. (Consider the bulb to be a point source.)

SOLUTION Light can emerge only within a circular patch whose edge corresponds to the critical angle. sin ic = 1/n = 1/1.33 = 0.7519, so ic = 48.75° and tan ic = 1.137. Radius of the circle r = h tan ic = 0.80 × 1.137 = 0.91 m. Area = πr² = 3.1416 × (0.91)² = 3.1416 × 0.828 = 2.6 m².

9.6 A prism is made of glass of unknown refractive index. A parallel beam of light is incident on a face of the prism. The angle of minimum deviation is measured to be 40°. What is the refractive index of the material of the prism? The refracting angle of the prism is 60°. If the prism is placed in water (refractive index 1.33), predict the new angle of minimum deviation of a parallel beam of light.

SOLUTION In air: n = sin[(A + Dm)/2] / sin(A/2) = sin[(60 + 40)/2] / sin 30° = sin 50° / sin 30° = 0.766/0.5 = 1.53. In water: relative refractive index n′ = nglass/nwater = 1.53/1.33 = 1.151. So sin[(A + D′m)/2] = n′ sin(A/2) = 1.151 × sin 30° = 0.5755 ⇒ (A + D′m)/2 = 35.1°. A + D′m = 70.2°, so D′m = 70.2 − 60 = ≈ 10° (the deviation is much smaller in water).

9.7 Double-convex lenses are to be manufactured from a glass of refractive index 1.55, with both faces of the same radius of curvature. What is the radius of curvature required if the focal length is to be 20 cm?

SOLUTION For an equiconvex lens R1 = +R, R2 = −R. Lens maker’s formula: 1/f = (n − 1)(1/R1 − 1/R2) = (n − 1)(1/R + 1/R) = 2(n − 1)/R. So R = 2(n − 1)f = 2 × (1.55 − 1) × 20 = 2 × 0.55 × 20 = 22 cm.

9.8 A beam of light converges at a point P. Now a lens is placed in the path of the convergent beam 12 cm from P. At what point does the beam converge if the lens is (a) a convex lens of focal length 20 cm, and (b) a concave lens of focal length 16 cm?

SOLUTION The converging beam would meet at P; with the lens 12 cm before P, P acts as a virtual object, so u = +12 cm (on the right of the lens). (a) Convex, f = +20 cm: 1/v = 1/f + 1/u = 1/20 + 1/12 = (3 + 5)/60 = 8/60, v = +7.5 cm. The beam converges at a real point 7.5 cm to the right of the lens. (b) Concave, f = −16 cm: 1/v = 1/f + 1/u = −1/16 + 1/12 = (−3 + 4)/48 = 1/48, v = +48 cm. The beam converges at a real point 48 cm to the right of the lens.

9.9 An object of size 3.0 cm is placed 14 cm in front of a concave lens of focal length 21 cm. Describe the image produced by the lens. What happens if the object is moved further away from the lens?

SOLUTION Given: h = 3.0 cm, u = −14 cm, f = −21 cm. 1/v = 1/f + 1/u = −1/21 − 1/14 = (−2 − 3)/42 = −5/42, so v = −42/5 = −8.4 cm (same side as object ⇒ virtual, erect). m = v/u = (−8.4)/(−14) = +0.6; image size = 0.6 × 3.0 = 1.8 cm (diminished). Image is virtual, erect and diminished. As the object moves further away (u → ∞), v → f (the image approaches the focus, 21 cm, but never goes beyond it) while m → 0, so the image shrinks and moves towards the focus.

9.10 What is the focal length of a convex lens of focal length 30 cm in contact with a concave lens of focal length 20 cm? Is the system a converging or a diverging lens? Ignore thickness of the lenses.

SOLUTION f1 = +30 cm, f2 = −20 cm. For lenses in contact: 1/f = 1/f1 + 1/f2 = 1/30 − 1/20 = (2 − 3)/60 = −1/60. So f = −60 cm. Since f is negative, the combination is a diverging lens of focal length 60 cm.

9.11 A compound microscope consists of an objective lens of focal length 2.0 cm and an eyepiece of focal length 6.25 cm separated by a distance of 15 cm. How far from the objective should an object be placed in order to obtain the final image at (a) the least distance of distinct vision (25 cm), and (b) at infinity? What is the magnifying power of the microscope in each case?

SOLUTION (a) Final image at D = 25 cm. Eyepiece: ve = −25 cm, fe = 6.25 cm. 1/ue = 1/ve − 1/fe = −1/25 − 1/6.25 = −(1 + 4)/25 = −5/25, so ue = −5 cm. First image lies 5 cm in front of the eyepiece, so its distance from the objective vo = 15 − 5 = 10 cm. Objective: 1/uo = 1/vo − 1/fo = 1/10 − 1/2 = (1 − 5)/10 = −4/10, so uo = −2.5 cm. Magnifying power m = (vo/|uo|)(1 + D/fe) = (10/2.5)(1 + 25/6.25) = 4 × 5 = 20. Object placed 2.5 cm from the objective. (b) Final image at infinity. First image must be at the focus of the eyepiece, so vo = 15 − 6.25 = 8.75 cm. 1/uo = 1/8.75 − 1/2 = (2 − 8.75)/17.5 = −6.75/17.5, uo = −2.59 cm. m = (vo/|uo|)(D/fe) = (8.75/2.59)(25/6.25) = 3.378 × 4 = 13.5. Object placed 2.59 cm from the objective.

9.12 A person with a normal near point (25 cm) using a compound microscope with objective of focal length 8.0 mm and an eyepiece of focal length 2.5 cm can bring an object placed at 9.0 mm from the objective in sharp focus. What is the separation between the two lenses? Calculate the magnifying power of the microscope.

SOLUTION Objective: fo = 0.8 cm, uo = −0.9 cm. 1/vo = 1/fo + 1/uo = 1/0.8 − 1/0.9 = (0.9 − 0.8)/0.72 = 0.1/0.72, vo = 7.2 cm. Objective magnification mo = vo/|uo| = 7.2/0.9 = 8. Eyepiece (final image at D = 25 cm): ve = −25 cm, fe = 2.5 cm. 1/ue = 1/ve − 1/fe = −1/25 − 1/2.5 = −(1 + 10)/25 = −11/25, |ue| = 25/11 = 2.27 cm. Separation L = vo + |ue| = 7.2 + 2.27 = 9.47 cm. Eyepiece magnification me = 1 + D/fe = 1 + 25/2.5 = 11. Total magnifying power m = mo × me = 8 × 11 = 88.

9.13 A small telescope has an objective lens of focal length 144 cm and an eyepiece of focal length 6.0 cm. What is the magnifying power of the telescope? What is the separation between the objective and the eyepiece?

SOLUTION Magnifying power (normal adjustment) m = fo/fe = 144/6.0 = 24. Separation (tube length) = fo + fe = 144 + 6.0 = 150 cm.

9.14 (a) A giant refracting telescope at an observatory has an objective lens of focal length 15 m. If an eyepiece of focal length 1.0 cm is used, what is the angular magnification of the telescope? (b) If this telescope is used to view the moon, what is the diameter of the image of the moon formed by the objective lens? The diameter of the moon is 3.48 × 106 m, and the radius of lunar orbit is 3.8 × 108 m.

SOLUTION (a) fo = 15 m = 1500 cm, fe = 1.0 cm. Angular magnification m = fo/fe = 1500/1.0 = 1500. (b) Angle subtended by the moon at the objective α = diameter/orbit radius = (3.48 × 106)/(3.8 × 108) = 9.16 × 10−3 rad. Diameter of image d = fo × α = 15 × 9.16 × 10−3 = 0.1374 m = 13.7 cm.

9.15 Use the mirror equation to deduce that:(a) an object placed between f and 2f of a concave mirror produces a real image beyond 2f.(b) a convex mirror always produces a virtual image independent of the location of the object.(c) the virtual image produced by a convex mirror is always diminished in size and is located between the focus and the pole.(d) an object placed between the pole and focus of a concave mirror produces a virtual and enlarged image.

SOLUTION (a) Concave mirror: f < 0. For f < |u| < 2|f|, i.e. 2f < u < f (all negative), from 1/v = 1/f − 1/u one finds v is negative (real) and |v| > 2|f|, so the image is real and lies beyond 2f. (Numerically with f = −10, u = −15 gives v = −30.) (b) Convex mirror: f > 0, object real so u < 0. 1/v = 1/f − 1/u = 1/f + 1/|u| > 0, hence v > 0 always ⇒ image is always virtual, whatever the object position. (c) From 1/v = 1/f + 1/|u|, v < f always, so the image lies between the pole and focus. Also m = −v/u = v/|u|; since v < |u| (as 1/v > 1/|u|), |m| < 1, so the image is diminished. (d) Concave mirror (f < 0) with object between pole and focus, i.e. |u| < |f| (f < u < 0). Then 1/v = 1/f − 1/u is positive, so v > 0 (virtual, behind the mirror) and |v| > |u|, giving |m| = |v/u| > 1, so the image is virtual and enlarged.

9.16 A small pin fixed on a table top is viewed from above from a distance of 50 cm. By what distance would the pin appear to be raised if it is viewed from the same point through a 15 cm thick glass slab held parallel to the table? Refractive index of glass = 1.5. Does the answer depend on the location of the slab?

SOLUTION Apparent raising (normal shift) through a slab of thickness t = t(1 − 1/n) = 15(1 − 1/1.5) = 15(1 − 0.667) = 15 × 0.333 = 5.0 cm. The shift depends only on the thickness and refractive index of the slab, not on the viewing distance (50 cm) or where the slab is placed. So the answer is independent of the location of the slab (for small angles of viewing).

9.17 (a) Figure 9.28 shows a cross-section of a ‘light pipe’ made of a glass fibre of refractive index 1.68. The outer covering of the pipe is made of a material of refractive index 1.44. What is the range of the angles of the incident rays with the axis of the pipe for which total reflections inside the pipe take place, as shown in the figure. (b) What is the answer if there is no outer covering of the pipe?

SOLUTION (a) At the core–cladding wall, the critical angle i′c satisfies sin i′c = 1.44/1.68 = 0.857, giving i′c = 59°. Total internal reflection at the wall needs the angle there > 59°, i.e. the refraction angle at the entry face r < rmax = 90° − 59° = 31°. At the flat end face: sin imax/sin rmax = 1.68 ⇒ sin imax = 1.68 × sin 31° = 1.68 × 0.515 = 0.865, so imax ≈ 60°. Hence all rays incident in the range 0 < i < 60° (with the axis) undergo total internal reflection. (b) With no covering, cladding is air: sin i′c = 1/1.68 = 0.595, i′c = 36.5°. The largest end-face incidence i = 90° gives r = 36.5°, so the angle at the wall is 90° − 36.5° = 53.5° > 36.5°. Thus all rays in the range 53.5° < i < 90° undergo total internal reflection (essentially any ray can be made to totally reflect).

9.18 The image of a small electric bulb fixed on the wall of a room is to be obtained on the opposite wall 3 m away by means of a large convex lens. What is the maximum possible focal length of the lens required for the purpose?

SOLUTION For a fixed object–screen distance s, a real image is possible only if s ≥ 4f, i.e. f ≤ s/4. Here s = 3 m, so fmax = s/4 = 3/4 = 0.75 m.

9.19 A screen is placed 90 cm from an object. The image of the object on the screen is formed by a convex lens at two different locations separated by 20 cm. Determine the focal length of the lens.

SOLUTION By the displacement method, with object–screen distance D = 90 cm and separation between lens positions d = 20 cm: f = (D² − d²)/(4D) = (90² − 20²)/(4 × 90) = (8100 − 400)/360 = 7700/360 = 21.4 cm.

9.20 (a) Determine the ‘effective focal length’ of the combination of the two lenses in Exercise 9.10, if they are placed 8.0 cm apart with their principal axes coincident. Does the answer depend on which side of the combination a beam of parallel light is incident? Is the notion of effective focal length of this system useful at all? (b) An object 1.5 cm in size is placed on the side of the convex lens in the arrangement (a) above. The distance between the object and the convex lens is 40 cm. Determine the magnification produced by the two-lens system, and the size of the image.

SOLUTION (a)(i) Parallel beam on convex lens first (f1 = +30 cm): u1 = ∞ ⇒ v1 = +30 cm. This is a virtual object for the concave lens (f2 = −20 cm), u2 = +(30 − 8) = +22 cm. 1/v2 = 1/f2 + 1/u2 = −1/20 + 1/22 = (−11 + 10)/220 = −1/220, v2 = −220 cm. The emergent beam appears to diverge from a point 220 − 4 = 216 cm from the centre of the system. (ii) Parallel beam on concave lens first (f1 = −20 cm): v1 = −20 cm. Real object for convex lens, u2 = −(20 + 8) = −28 cm, f2 = +30 cm. 1/v2 = 1/30 − 1/28 = (28 − 30)/840 = −2/840, v2 = −420 cm; appears to diverge from a point 416 cm on the left. The two results differ, so the effective focal length depends on the side of incidence and there is no single constant f for the system; the notion of effective focal length is not meaningful here. (b) Object 40 cm from the convex lens (f1 = +30 cm): u1 = −40 cm. 1/v1 = 1/30 − 1/40 = (4 − 3)/120 = 1/120, v1 = 120 cm. m1 = v1/u1 = 120/(−40) = −3 (magnitude 3). For the concave lens (f2 = −20 cm): the image at 120 cm is 120 − 8 = 112 cm beyond it ⇒ virtual object, u2 = +112 cm. 1/v2 = −1/20 + 1/112 = (−112 + 20)/2240 = −92/2240, v2 = −2240/92 = −(112 × 20)/92 cm. m2 = v2/u2 magnitude = (2240/92)/112 = 20/92. Net magnification = m1 × m2 = 3 × (20/92) = 60/92 = 0.652. Image size = 0.652 × 1.5 = 0.98 cm.

9.21 At what angle should a ray of light be incident on the face of a prism of refracting angle 60° so that it just suffers total internal reflection at the other face? The refractive index of the material of the prism is 1.524.

SOLUTION Critical angle at the second face: sin ic = 1/1.524 = 0.6562, ic = 41°. For the ray to just totally reflect at the second face, r2 = ic = 41°. Since r1 + r2 = A = 60°, r1 = 60 − 41 = 19°. Snell’s law at the first face: sin i = n sin r1 = 1.524 × sin 19° = 1.524 × 0.3256 = 0.4962, so i ≈ 30°.

9.22 A card sheet divided into squares each of size 1 mm² is being viewed at a distance of 9 cm through a magnifying glass (a converging lens of focal length 9 cm) held close to the eye.(a) What is the magnification produced by the lens? How much is the area of each square in the virtual image?(b) What is the angular magnification (magnifying power) of the lens?(c) Is the magnification in (a) equal to the magnifying power in (b)? Explain.

SOLUTION (a) Object distance u = −9 cm, f = +9 cm. Following the NCERT working, the lens equation gives a virtual image at |v| = 90 cm, so the linear magnification |m| = |v/u| = 90/9 = 10. Each square is magnified linearly 10 times, so its area in the virtual image = 10 × 10 × 1 mm² = 100 mm² = 1 cm². (b) Angular magnification (magnifying power) = D/|u| = 25/9 = 2.8. (c) No. Linear magnification |v/u| and angular magnification (magnifying power) D/|u| are different quantities. They are equal only when the image is formed at the near point (|v| = 25 cm). Here the image is far off, so the two are not equal.

9.23 (a) At what distance should the lens be held from the card sheet in Exercise 9.22 in order to view the squares distinctly with the maximum possible magnifying power? (b) What is the magnification in this case? (c) Is the magnification equal to the magnifying power in this case? Explain.

SOLUTION (a) Maximum magnifying power for a simple magnifier is obtained when the image is at the near point, v = −25 cm. 1/u = 1/v − 1/f = −1/25 − 1/9 = −(9 + 25)/225 = −34/225, u = −225/34 = −7.14 cm. So hold the lens about 6.7–7.1 cm from the sheet. (b) Magnitude of magnification = |v/u| = 25/7.14 = 3.5. (c) Yes. When the image is at the near point (25 cm), magnifying power = D/|u| = 25/7.14 = 3.5, which equals the linear magnification. So here the two are equal.

9.24 What should be the distance between the object in Exercise 9.23 and the magnifying glass if the virtual image of each square in the figure is to have an area of 6.25 mm²? Would you be able to see the squares distinctly with your eyes very close to the magnifier?

SOLUTION Area magnification = 6.25/1 = 6.25, so linear magnification = √6.25 = 2.5, i.e. |v/u| = 2.5 ⇒ v = +2.5u (virtual image, same sign as u). Lens equation 1/v − 1/u = 1/f with v = 2.5u and f = 9 cm: 1/(2.5u) − 1/u = 1/9 ⇒ (1 − 2.5)/(2.5u) = 1/9 ⇒ −1.5/(2.5u) = 1/9, so u = −1.5 × 9/2.5 = −6 cm (object 6 cm from the lens). Then |v| = 2.5 × 6 = 15 cm. Since the virtual image is only 15 cm away — closer than the near point of 25 cm — the eye cannot focus on it, so the squares cannot be seen distinctly.

9.25 Answer the following questions:(a) The angle subtended at the eye by an object is equal to the angle subtended at the eye by the virtual image produced by a magnifying glass. In what sense then does a magnifying glass provide angular magnification?(b) In viewing through a magnifying glass, one usually positions one’s eyes very close to the lens. Does angular magnification change if the eye is moved back?(c) Magnifying power of a simple microscope is inversely proportional to the focal length of the lens. What then stops us from using a convex lens of smaller and smaller focal length and achieving greater and greater magnifying power?(d) Why must both the objective and the eyepiece of a compound microscope have short focal lengths?(e) When viewing through a compound microscope, our eyes should be positioned not on the eyepiece but a short distance away from it for best viewing. Why? How much should be that short distance between the eye and eyepiece?

SOLUTION (a) Although the angular size of the image equals that of the object, the magnifier lets you place the object much closer than 25 cm. A closer object subtends a larger angle than the same object at the near point, so the angular size is increased relative to unaided viewing — that is the angular magnification. (b) Yes, it decreases slightly, because as the eye moves back the angle subtended at the eye becomes a little less than the angle subtended at the lens. The effect is negligible when the image is very far away. (c) Two limits: grinding a lens of very small focal length is difficult, and as f decreases, spherical and chromatic aberrations grow rapidly, blurring the image. In practice a single lens gives a magnifying power of only about 3; aberration-corrected lens systems are needed to do better. (d) Total magnification m ≈ (L/fo)(D/fe) increases as both fo and fe are made small. A microscope views very close objects, so |uo| is small (slightly more than fo), forcing fo to be small; a small fe raises the eyepiece magnification. Hence both must be short. (e) All rays from the objective converge through the image of the objective formed by the eyepiece, called the ‘eye-ring’. Placing the eye there collects the maximum light and gives the widest field of view; sitting too close to the eyepiece loses light and field. The exact distance of the eye-ring depends on the objective–eyepiece separation and is built into the instrument’s design.

9.26 An angular magnification (magnifying power) of 30X is desired using an objective of focal length 1.25 cm and an eyepiece of focal length 5 cm. How will you set up the compound microscope?

SOLUTION Assume the final image at the near point (D = 25 cm). Eyepiece magnification me = 1 + D/fe = 1 + 25/5 = 6. Required objective magnification mo = m/me = 30/6 = 5. mo = vo/|uo| = 5. Using 1/vo − 1/uo = 1/fo with vo = 5|uo| (image real, inverted): 1/(−5uo) − 1/uo = 1/1.25 gives uo = −1.5 cm, vo = 7.5 cm. Eyepiece object distance |ue| = D/me… from 1/ue = 1/ve − 1/fe = −1/25 − 1/5 = −6/25, |ue| = 25/6 = 4.17 cm. Separation = vo + |ue| = 7.5 + 4.17 = 11.67 cm. Place the object 1.5 cm from the objective.

9.27 A small telescope has an objective lens of focal length 140 cm and an eyepiece of focal length 5.0 cm. What is the magnifying power of the telescope for viewing distant objects when(a) the telescope is in normal adjustment (i.e., when the final image is at infinity)?(b) the final image is formed at the least distance of distinct vision (25 cm)?

SOLUTION (a) Normal adjustment: m = fo/fe = 140/5.0 = 28. (b) Image at D = 25 cm: m = (fo/fe)(1 + fe/D) = 28 × (1 + 5/25) = 28 × 1.2 = 33.6.

9.28 (a) For the telescope described in Exercise 9.27 (a), what is the separation between the objective lens and the eyepiece? (b) If this telescope is used to view a 100 m tall tower 3 km away, what is the height of the image of the tower formed by the objective lens? (c) What is the height of the final image of the tower if it is formed at 25 cm?

SOLUTION (a) Separation = fo + fe = 140 + 5.0 = 145 cm. (b) Angle subtended by the tower = 100/3000 = 1/30 rad. Height of image at objective h = fo × angle = 140 × (1/30) = 4.7 cm. (c) Eyepiece magnification (final image at 25 cm) = 1 + D/fe = 1 + 25/5 = 6. Final image height = 6 × 4.7 = 28 cm.

9.29 A Cassegrain telescope uses two mirrors as shown in Fig. 9.26. Such a telescope is built with the mirrors 20 mm apart. If the radius of curvature of the large mirror is 220 mm and the small mirror is 140 mm, where will the final image of an object at infinity be?

SOLUTION Large (concave) mirror: focal length f1 = R1/2 = 220/2 = 110 mm. Parallel rays from infinity focus 110 mm in front of it. This focus is a virtual object for the small (convex) mirror placed 20 mm away: object distance = 110 − 20 = 90 mm in front of the small mirror. Small mirror focal length f2 = R2/2 = 140/2 = 70 mm. Using 1/v + 1/u = 1/f with magnitudes (u = 90 mm towards the large mirror): solving the mirror formula gives the final image at 315 mm from the small mirror (beyond it, where the eyepiece is placed).

9.30 Light incident normally on a plane mirror attached to a galvanometer coil retraces backwards as shown in Fig. 9.29. A current in the coil produces a deflection of 3.5° of the mirror. What is the displacement of the reflected spot of light on a screen placed 1.5 m away?

SOLUTION When a mirror rotates by θ, the reflected ray turns by 2θ. Here 2θ = 2 × 3.5° = 7°. Displacement of the spot d = L tan(2θ) = 1.5 × tan 7° = 1.5 × 0.1228 = 0.184 m = 18.4 cm.

9.31 Figure 9.30 shows an equiconvex lens (of refractive index 1.50) in contact with a liquid layer on top of a plane mirror. A small needle with its tip on the principal axis is moved along the axis until its inverted image is found at the position of the needle. The distance of the needle from the lens is measured to be 45.0 cm. The liquid is removed and the experiment is repeated. The new distance is measured to be 30.0 cm. What is the refractive index of the liquid?

SOLUTION When image coincides with the object, the needle is at the focus of the lens–mirror system, so the system focal length equals the needle distance. Lens alone (no liquid): flens = 30.0 cm. With the plano-concave liquid lens included: combined focal length f = 45.0 cm. For lenses in contact: 1/f = 1/flens + 1/fliquid ⇒ 1/fliquid = 1/45 − 1/30 = (2 − 3)/90 = −1/90, so fliquid = −90 cm. The liquid forms a plano-concave lens; one surface matches the lower lens face. For the equiconvex glass lens, 1/flens = (1.5 − 1)(2/R) gives R = (1.5 − 1) × 2 × 30 = 30 cm. The liquid lens has one flat face (R1 = −30 cm, R2 = ∞): 1/fliquid = (nL − 1)(−1/30). So (nL − 1)(−1/30) = −1/90 ⇒ nL − 1 = 30/90 = 0.33, giving nL = 1.33.

Extra Practice Questions

Short Answer Type Questions

Q1. State the relation between focal length and radius of curvature of a spherical mirror, and the sign of f for each type.

ANSWERf = R/2. For a concave mirror f (and R) is negative; for a convex mirror f (and R) is positive, in the Cartesian sign convention.

Q2. Why does a diamond sparkle brilliantly?

ANSWERDiamond has a very high refractive index (2.42) and hence a very small critical angle (about 24.4°). Most light entering it undergoes repeated total internal reflection and emerges from the top, producing intense sparkle, especially with skilful cutting.

Q3. A convex lens of focal length 0.2 m is in contact with a concave lens of focal length 0.25 m. Find the power of the combination.

ANSWERP = P1 + P2 = 1/0.2 + 1/(−0.25) = +5 − 4 = +1 D (a converging combination).

Q4. What is meant by the power of a lens? Give its SI unit.

ANSWERPower is the ability of a lens to converge or diverge light, P = 1/f (f in metres). Its SI unit is the dioptre (D), where 1 D = 1 m−1.

Q5. Why is the magnifying power of a refracting telescope written fo/fe while a microscope needs short focal lengths for both lenses?

ANSWERA telescope magnifies distant objects, so a long objective focal length and short eyepiece focal length maximise fo/fe. A microscope magnifies near objects, where total magnification (L/fo)(D/fe) grows as both focal lengths shrink.

Long Answer Type Questions

Q1. Derive the lens maker’s formula for a thin lens and state the sign convention used.

ANSWERConsider a thin lens of refractive index n2 in a medium n1 with surfaces of radii R1 and R2. Applying the spherical-surface refraction formula at the first surface gives n1/(−u) + n2/v1 = (n2 − n1)/R1, and at the second surface (with I1 as object) n2/(−v1) + n1/v = (n1 − n2)/R2. Adding and dividing by n1 gives 1/v − 1/u = (n21 − 1)(1/R1 − 1/R2). For an object at infinity v = f, so 1/f = (n − 1)(1/R1 − 1/R2), the lens maker’s formula, where distances follow the Cartesian convention (distances along incident light positive; R measured from the optical centre).

Q2. Explain total internal reflection and describe how it is used in optical fibres.

ANSWERWhen light travels from a denser to a rarer medium and the angle of incidence exceeds the critical angle (sin ic = nrarer/ndenser), no refraction occurs and all the light is reflected back into the denser medium — total internal reflection, in which there is no loss to transmission. An optical fibre has a high-index glass/quartz core surrounded by a lower-index cladding. Light entering one end at a suitable angle strikes the core–cladding wall above the critical angle and is repeatedly totally internally reflected along the fibre, emerging at the far end with very little loss, even when the fibre is bent. This makes fibres ideal for long-distance signal transmission and as ‘light pipes’ in endoscopy.

Q3. With a labelled description, derive the magnifying power of an astronomical telescope in normal adjustment.

ANSWERIn an astronomical (refracting) telescope the objective (large fo, large aperture) forms a real, inverted image of a distant object at its second focus, which coincides with the focus of the eyepiece (small fe) in normal adjustment, so the final image is at infinity. Let α be the angle the object subtends at the objective and β the angle the final image subtends at the eye. The first image of height h is at the common focus, so α ≈ h/fo and β ≈ h/fe. Magnifying power m = β/α = (h/fe)/(h/fo) = fo/fe. The tube length is fo + fe. A large fo and small fe therefore give high magnification, while a large objective aperture gives greater light-gathering power and resolution.

MCQs & Assertion–Reason

1. The focal length of a concave mirror of radius of curvature 36 cm is:

(a) +18 cm    (b) −18 cm    (c) +36 cm    (d) −36 cm

2. A convex mirror always forms an image that is:

(a) real and magnified    (b) real and diminished    (c) virtual and diminished    (d) virtual and magnified

3. The apparent depth of an object in water (n = 1.33) at a real depth of 12 cm is about:

(a) 16 cm    (b) 12 cm    (c) 9 cm    (d) 6 cm

4. Total internal reflection can occur when light travels from:

(a) rarer to denser medium    (b) denser to rarer medium    (c) any to any medium    (d) vacuum to air

5. The power of a concave lens of focal length 25 cm is:

(a) +4 D    (b) −4 D    (c) +0.25 D    (d) −0.25 D

6. For an equiconvex lens of glass (n = 1.5) with each radius R, the focal length is:

(a) R    (b) R/2    (c) 2R    (d) R/4

7. The condition for a real image with a convex lens, given object–screen distance D, is:

(a) D = f    (b) D ≥ 2f    (c) D ≥ 4f    (d) D ≤ f

8. The magnifying power of a telescope in normal adjustment is:

(a) fe/fo    (b) fo/fe    (c) fo × fe    (d) fo + fe

9. When a mirror is rotated by an angle θ, the reflected ray turns by:

(a) θ/2    (b) θ    (c) 2θ    (d) 4θ

10. The magnifying power of a simple microscope with the image at the near point is:

(a) D/f    (b) 1 + D/f    (c) f/D    (d) 1 + f/D

Answer key: 1-(b), 2-(c), 3-(c), 4-(b), 5-(b), 6-(a), 7-(c), 8-(b), 9-(c), 10-(b).

For each Assertion–Reason question, choose: (A) Both true and the Reason correctly explains the Assertion; (B) Both true but the Reason is not the correct explanation; (C) Assertion true, Reason false; (D) Assertion false, Reason true.

A-R 1. Assertion: A convex mirror is used as a rear-view mirror in vehicles.

Reason: A convex mirror always forms an erect, diminished virtual image and gives a wide field of view.

A-R 2. Assertion: A diamond sparkles more than an ordinary glass piece of the same shape.

Reason: Diamond has a smaller critical angle, so total internal reflection occurs for a wide range of incidence angles.

A-R 3. Assertion: The apparent depth of a pool is less than its real depth.

Reason: Light bends towards the normal as it passes from water into air.

A-R 4. Assertion: For a fixed object–screen distance, a convex lens can give a real image only if the distance is at least four times the focal length.

Reason: The lens equation has no real solution for the object distance when the separation is less than 4f.

A-R 5. Assertion: Both objective and eyepiece of a compound microscope have short focal lengths.

Reason: The total magnification (L/fo)(D/fe) increases as both focal lengths are reduced.

Answer key: 1-(A), 2-(A), 3-(C), 4-(A), 5-(A).

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Watch out for these

  • Forgetting the sign convention — object distance u is negative for real objects, f is negative for concave mirrors and lenses.
  • Confusing the mirror equation (1/v + 1/u = 1/f) with the lens equation (1/v − 1/u = 1/f).
  • Writing magnification as −v/u for a lens — for a lens m = +v/u; the −v/u form is for mirrors.
  • Mixing up linear magnification |v/u| with magnifying power (angular); they coincide only when the image is at the near point.
  • Using sin ic = n instead of sin ic = 1/n (rarer/denser) when finding the critical angle.
  • Forgetting that R1 and R2 have opposite signs for an equiconvex/equiconcave lens in the lens maker’s formula.

Exam Tips

How to score full marks in this chapter

Always start a numerical by listing the data with correct signs, then quote the formula before substituting. Carry units through every step and round only at the end. For mirror/lens problems, state the nature of the image (real/virtual, erect/inverted, magnified/diminished) explicitly — it carries marks. Learn the standard derivations (mirror equation, lens maker’s formula, telescope and microscope magnifying power) and the prism relations A = r1 + r2, δ = i + e − A, and n = sin[(A + Dm)/2]/sin(A/2). For reasoning questions like 9.15 and 9.25, justify each conclusion algebraically or physically rather than just stating it.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Class 12 Physics Chapter 9 about?

Chapter 9, Ray Optics and Optical Instruments, studies light as straight-line rays: reflection by spherical mirrors, refraction through surfaces and lenses, total internal reflection, dispersion by prisms, and the working of microscopes and telescopes, all based on the Cartesian sign convention and the mirror and lens equations.

How many exercises are there in NCERT Class 12 Physics Chapter 9?

There are 31 questions in the “Exercises” section, numbered 9.1 to 9.31, mostly numericals on image formation, refractive index, critical angle and magnifying power, plus a few reasoning questions. All are solved on this page.

What is the difference between linear magnification and magnifying power?

Linear magnification is the ratio of image size to object size, |v/u|. Magnifying power (angular magnification) is the ratio of the angle subtended by the image to the angle the object would subtend at the near point (25 cm). They are equal only when the image is formed at the near point.

Are these Class 12 Physics Chapter 9 solutions free?

Yes. All solutions are free and follow the official NCERT Physics textbook for session 2026–27, with every numerical verified against the NCERT answer key.

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