A light ray emits from the origin making an angle of with the positive -axis. After getting reflected by the line , if this ray intersects the -axis at Q, then the abscissa of Q is:
- A
- B
- C
- D
A light ray emits from the origin making an angle of with the positive -axis. After getting reflected by the line , if this ray intersects the -axis at Q, then the abscissa of Q is:
Correct answer:B
Standard Method
Given: A light ray starts from the origin and makes an angle of with the positive -axis. It is reflected by the line .
Find: The abscissa of the point Q where the reflected ray meets the -axis.
From the solution, the reflected ray is taken to have slope
So its equation is written as
Next, the intersection with the line is found by substitution:
Rationalizing,
the solution states that the correct option is B. There is a discrepancy between the displayed intermediate value and the listed option values, but the source solution explicitly concludes that the correct option is B.
Therefore, the correct option is B, i.e. .
Noting the source discrepancy
The extracted solution content is internally inconsistent: it computes
which does not match option B. However, the same the solution explicitly states "The Correct Option is B". Following the source-page answer authority, the answer is recorded as B.
Taking the slope of a ray making angle with the positive -axis as without checking the geometry of reflection. This mixes the incident angle with another direction. First identify the incident ray slope, then apply the reflection condition with the mirror line.
Assuming the reflected ray still passes through the origin after reflection. That is wrong because after reflection the outgoing ray passes through the point of incidence on , not necessarily through the origin. Always locate the reflection point before writing the reflected line.
Using the intersection point of the reflected ray with as the final point Q. This is incorrect because Q is defined where the reflected ray meets the -axis. After finding the reflected ray equation, set to get the abscissa of Q.
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