CBSE Class 10th Science 2023 : Important Diagrams For Last Minute Revision

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CBSE Class 10th Science 2023 : Important Diagrams For Last Minute Revision
CBSE Class 10 Science Important Diagrams : We are presenting here some important diagrams from CBSE Class 10 Biology topic. Questions based on these diagrams are often asked in CBSE Board Exams.
With this article, students can revise all the important diagrams in very less time and prepare well to score high in their CBSE Class 10 Science Exam 2023.
Important Diagrams for CBSE Class 10
Neuron
Brain
Reflex Arc
Endocrine Glands In Human Beings- Male
Endocrine Glands In Human Beings- Female
Nephron
Internal Structure Of Heart
Human Respiratory System
Human Digestive System
Cross Section Of A Leaf
Nutrition In Amoeba
Longitudinal Section (LS) Of A Flower
Germination Of Pollen On Stigma
Human eye
5. Defects of vision and their correction
(i) Myopia (near sightedness) and its correction with convex lens: Myopia is the defect of the eye vision due to which a person can see the nearby objects clearly but cannot see the far objects so distinctly. In this case, the image is formed in front of the retina.
Myopia can be corrected by using a concave lens of suitable focal length in the spectacles of such a person.
(ii) Hypermetropia (far sightedness) and correction with concave lens: Hypermetropia is the defect of the eye vision due to which a person can see distant objects distinctly but cannot see nearby objects so clearly. In this case, the image is formed behind the retina. Hypermetropia can be corrected by using convex lens of suitable focal length in spectacles.
6. Refraction of Light through a Glass Prism
Prism is a transparent optical object with flat, polished surfaces that refract light. At least two of the flat surfaces must have an angle between them. When a ray of light enters the glass prism it gets deviated two times. First when it enters the glass prism and second when it comes out of the prism. The emergent ray is divided by an angle to the incident ray. This angle is called the angle of deviation.
7. Dispersion of White Light by the Glass Prism
When a beam of white light is passed through a glass prism, it is split up into a band of colours called spectrum. This is called dispersion of white light. The spectrum of white light has the colours violet, indigo, blue, green, yellow, orange and red (VIBGYOR).
8. Recombination of the Spectrum of White Light
When a beam of white light is passed through a glass prism, it is split up into its component colours. When these colours are allowed to fall on an inverted glass prism it recombines to produce white light.
9. Rainbow Formation
A rainbow is a natural spectrum appearing in the sky after a rain shower. It is caused by the dispersion of sunlight by water droplets present in the atmosphere. The water droplets act like small prisms. They refract and disperse the sunlight which again reflected internally and finally refracted again when coming out of the rain drops. Due to the dispersion and internal reflection of sunlight by the water droplets, we see the rainbow.
10. Refraction of Light Through Rectangular Glass Slab
11. Atmospheric Refraction Effects
(i) Advance sunrise and delayed sunset: The sun is visible to us about 2 minutes before sunrise and about 2 minutes after sunset. This happens due to the apparent flattening of the sun’s disc at sunrise and at sunset which caused by the atmospheric refraction of sunlight.
(ii) Reddening of The Sun at Sunrise And Sunset:
The light form the sun near the horizon passes through thicker layer of air and has to travel larger distance to reach the earth atmosphere before reaching our eyes. Thus, most of the blue light of shorter wave length gets scattered away by the atmospheric particles and the light reaching our eyes is of longer wavelength which give rise to reddish appearance of the sun. However light from the overhead sun at noon would have to travel relatively shorter distance due to which only a little of blue light and violet colours are scattered causing the sun appear white.
(iii) The Twinkling of Stars:
The star light after entering the earth's atmosphere undergoes refraction in a continuous manner before it reaches the Earth. The atmospheric refraction is due to change in the refractive index at different level in atmosphere. The star light bends towards the normal, the apparent position is different from the actual position of star. As path of rays of light coming from star varies slightly then the apparent position of star also varies slightly and the amount of light entering the eye flickers. Sometimes, it is brighter and sometimes the star seems fainter. In this way, stars twinkle.
Male Reproductive Organs
Female Reproductive Organs
CBSE Class 10 Study Material
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