Aim :
A) Determination of position and nature of image formed by a glass slab.
B) Understanding lateral and vertical shift.
C) Determination of refractive index of given glass slab.
Materials required :
Plank, chart paper, clamps, scale, pencil, thin glass slab and pins.

Procedure :
1. Place a piece of chart on a plank. Clamp it. Place a glass slab in the middle of the paper.
2. Draw border line along the edges of the slab by using a pencil. Remove it. You will get a figure of a rectangle.
3. Name the vertices of the rectangle as A, B, C and D.
4. Draw a perpendicular at a point on the longer sides (AB) of the rectangle.
5. Now draw a line, from the point of intersection where side AB of rectangle and perpendicular meet, in such a way that it makes 30° angle with the normal.
6. This line represents the incident ray falling on the slab and the angle it makes with normal represents angle of incidence.
7. Now place the slab on the paper in such a way that it fits in the rectangle drawn. Fix two identical pins on the line making 30° angle with normal, such that they stand vertically with same height.
8. By looking at the two pins from the other side of the slab, fix two pins in such a way that all pins appear to be along a straight line.
9. Remove the slab and take out pins. Draw a straight line by joining the dots formed by the pins up to the edge CD of the rectangle.
10. This line represents emergent ray of the light.
11. Draw a perpendicular to the line CD where our last line drawn meets the line CD.
12. Measure the angle between emergent ray and normal.
13. This is called angle of emergence.
14. The angle of incidence and angle of emergence are equal.
15. Incident emergent rays are parallel.
16. The distance between the parallel rays is called shift.