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Refractar

Refractar is a verb used in Spanish and Portuguese meaning to cause refraction, i.e., to bend light as it passes between media with different optical densities. In English-language technical writing the equivalent verb is refract, and “refractar” is not common outside Romance-language contexts. In some texts it appears as a direct loanword in translations or as a label in teaching materials.

In optics, refraction occurs when a light ray crosses an interface between materials of differing refractive

Outside its linguistic usage, “refractar” does not denote a standard concept in English science. It can be

See also: refraction, refractive index, Snell's law.

indices,
causing
a
change
in
the
ray's
direction.
The
relationship
between
angles
of
incidence
and
refraction
is
described
by
Snell's
law,
n1
sin(theta1)
=
n2
sin(theta2).
The
degree
of
bending
depends
on
the
refractive
indices
and
the
wavelength
of
light;
dispersion
causes
different
colors
to
bend
by
different
amounts,
producing
effects
such
as
rainbows
and
prisms.
seen
in
translations
or
as
a
proper
name
or
brand.
Related
terms
include
refract
(the
verb
in
English),
refraction
(the
process),
and
refractor
(a
telescope
type
or
device
that
refracts
light).