Critical Angle Calculator

Calculate the critical angle for total internal reflection: θ_c = arcsin(n₂/n₁). Find fiber optic numerical aperture (NA), acceptance cone, and check whether TIR occurs at a given incident angle.

Critical Angle θ_c (degrees)
TIR Possible?
Fiber Optic NA
Brewster's Angle from n₁ (degrees)
Extended More scenarios, charts & detailed breakdown
Critical Angle θ_c (degrees)
TIR Possible
Professional Full parameters & maximum detail

Total Internal Reflection

Critical Angle θ_c (degrees)
Brewster's Angle n₁→n₂ (degrees)

Fiber Optics

Numerical Aperture NA
Acceptance Half-Angle (degrees)
Full Acceptance Cone (degrees)

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter n₁ (the denser medium — must be greater than n₂ for TIR to occur).
  2. Enter n₂ (the less dense medium, default air = 1.0003).
  3. Results show the critical angle, TIR status, and fiber optic NA.
  4. Use TIR Check tab to test a specific incident angle.
  5. Use Common Pairs for glass-air, water-air, diamond-air presets.

Formula

Critical angle: θ_c = arcsin(n₂/n₁) (requires n₁ > n₂)

Fiber NA = √(n₁² − n₂²)

Acceptance half-angle = arcsin(NA)

Example

Example: Crown glass (n₁ = 1.517) vs air (n₂ = 1.000). θ_c = arcsin(1/1.517) = 41.3°. NA = √(1.517² − 1²) = 1.137... wait — NA for fiber requires n₁ close to n₂ (core/clad). Glass-air NA = √(1.517²−1) = 1.18 — valid acceptance angle = 90° (full hemisphere).

Frequently Asked Questions

  • θ_c = arcsin(n₂/n₁), where n₁ > n₂. When light in a denser medium hits a less dense medium at θ ≥ θ_c, no refracted ray exists — all light reflects back (total internal reflection). For glass-air (n₁=1.5): θ_c ≈ 41.8°.
  • Snell's Law: n₁ sin θ₁ = n₂ sin θ₂. If n₁ > n₂, as θ₁ increases, sin θ₂ = (n₁/n₂) sin θ₁ can exceed 1 — which is impossible. The critical angle is where sin θ₂ = 1, so θ₂ = 90° (refracted ray grazes the surface).
  • Fiber cores (n ≈ 1.48) are surrounded by cladding (n ≈ 1.46). Light entering within the acceptance cone bounces along the fiber via TIR with virtually no loss. NA = √(n_core² − n_clad²) defines the acceptance angle.
  • NA = n_medium × sin(θ_max) = √(n_core² − n_cladding²). Larger NA = wider acceptance cone = easier to couple light in, but more modal dispersion. Typical single-mode fiber: NA ≈ 0.12. Multi-mode: NA ≈ 0.20–0.50.
  • Diamond (n = 2.417) vs air: θ_c = arcsin(1/2.417) ≈ 24.4°. This very small critical angle means most light entering a diamond undergoes multiple TIR reflections before exiting — the source of diamond's brilliance.

Related Calculators

Sources & References (5)
  1. Total Internal Reflection — HyperPhysics — Georgia State University
  2. OpenStax University Physics Vol 3, Ch 1.5 — Total Internal Reflection — OpenStax
  3. Hecht, E. Optics (5th ed.) — Pearson
  4. MIT OCW 8.03 — Total Internal Reflection — MIT OpenCourseWare
  5. Corning Fiber Optics — Numerical Aperture Guide — Corning