Convex & Concave Lenses (AQA GCSE Physics)

Revision Note

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Convex & Concave Lenses

  • A lens is a piece of equipment that forms an image by refracting light
  • There are two types of lens:
    • Convex
    • Concave

Convex Lenses

  • In a convex lens, parallel rays of light are brought to a focus
    • This point is called the principal focus

  • This lens is sometimes referred to as a converging lens
  • The distance from the lens to the principal focus is called the focal length
    • This depends on how curved the lens is
    • The more curved the lens, the shorter the focal length

Lens focus, IGCSE & GCSE Physics revision notes

The focal length is the distance from the lens to the principal focus

Concave Lenses

  • In a concave lens, parallel rays of light are made to diverge (spread out) from a point
    • This lens is sometimes referred to as a diverging lens

  • The principal focus is now the point from which the rays appear to diverge from

Diverging Lens, downloadable IGCSE & GCSE Physics revision notes

Parallel rays from a concave lens appear to come from the principal focus

Representing Lenses

  • In diagrams, the following symbols are often used to represent each type of lens:

convex-concave-symbols-igcse-and-gcse-physics-revision-notes

Concave and convex symbols

Exam Tip

Make sure you remember the symbol for each type of lens, as you will be expected to draw these for ray diagrams in your exam!

To remember which lens is converging or diverging, think of the following: Convex lens = Converging

Ashika, Physics Project Lead

Teacher tip

Ashika

Physics Project Lead

In my experience, students can find the lens diagrams quite tricky to draw. They do look complicated, but they are very similar to the reflection and refraction ray diagrams you have done before. Take your time when completing the ray diagrams, do them step by step. Keep practising until you feel confident. I would advise that you scan your exam paper at the start of the exam to see if you have a lens diagram to draw in any questions. That way you can leave a bit of extra time to complete the question without rushing. Always use a ruler and a sharp pencil, but take a rubber into the exam with you just in case!

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Ashika

Author: Ashika

Ashika graduated with a first-class Physics degree from Manchester University and, having worked as a software engineer, focused on Physics education, creating engaging content to help students across all levels. Now an experienced GCSE and A Level Physics and Maths tutor, Ashika helps to grow and improve our Physics resources.