Consider a source of light like a candle. The light (intensity) spread as the spherical wave. We know the brightness decreases as we move away from the candle. We want to know exactly what is the intensity of the light falling on the unit area at a particular distance from the source. It can be obtained by dividing source's strength by the area of the sphere at that distance.
Intensity on the unit area = source's strength / area of the sphere
I=S/4𝚷R² R-Distance from source
I proportional 1/R² since S/4𝚷 is constant
S/4𝚷 is the constant so we understand that the intensity decreases as the distance's square increases or we can say, intensity of light is inversely proportional to the square of the distance. This is what we call inverse square law.
The inverse square law is applicable to gravitational, electric, magnetic, light, sound and radiation phenomena.
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