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22.5 Dispersion

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Snell's Law indicates that the angle of refraction when light enters a material ... of the law of refraction (Snell's law). sinq1=v1t/d (yellow triangle) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: 22.5 Dispersion


1
22.5 Dispersion
  • The index of refraction in anything but vacuum
    depends on the wavelength of the light
  • This dependence of n on ? is called dispersion,
    nf(l)
  • Snells Law indicates that the angle of
    refraction when light enters a material depends
    on the wavelength of the light

2
Variation of Index of Refraction with Wavelength
  • The index of refraction for a material usually
    decreases with increasing wavelength
  • Violet light refracts more than red light when
    passing from air into a material

3
Refraction in a Prism
  • The amount the ray is bent away from its original
    direction is called the angle of deviation, d
  • Since all the colors have different angles of
    deviation, they will spread out into a spectrum
  • Violet deviates the most
  • Red deviates the least

4
Prism Spectrometer
  • A prism spectrometer uses a prism to cause the
    wavelengths to separate
  • The instrument is commonly used to study
    wavelengths emitted by a light source

5
Using Spectra to Identify Gases
  • All hot, low pressure gases emit their own
    characteristic spectra
  • The particular wavelengths emitted by a gas serve
    as fingerprints of that gas
  • Some uses of spectral analysis
  • Identification of molecules
  • Identification of elements in distant stars
  • Identification of minerals

6
Example
Flint glass prism
n21
Find the angle each ray makes with the
horizontal.
30?
n11.66 (red)
q130?
60?
n11.70 (violet)
  • n1sinq1 n2sinq2
  • Red
  • q2sin-1(1.66/1.00sin30?)56.1?
  • Result 56.1?-30.0?26.1?
  • Violet
  • q2sin-1(1.70/1.00sin30?)58.2?
  • Result 58.2?-30.0?28.2?

7
22.6 The Rainbow
  • A ray of light strikes a drop of water in the
    atmosphere
  • It undergoes both reflection and refraction
  • First refraction at the front of the drop
  • Violet light will deviate the most
  • Red light will deviate the least

8
The Rainbow, cont.
  • At the back surface the light is reflected
  • It is refracted again as it returns to the front
    surface and moves into the air
  • The rays leave the drop at various angles
  • The angle between the white light and the violet
    ray is 40
  • The angle between the white light and the red ray
    is 42

9
Observing the Rainbow
  • If a raindrop high in the sky is observed, the
    red ray is seen
  • A drop lower in the sky would direct violet light
    to the observer
  • The other colors of the spectra lie in between
    the red and the violet

10
22. 7.Huygens Principle
  • Huygen assumed that light is a form of wave
    motion rather than a stream of particles
  • Huygens Principle is a geometric construction
    for determining the position of a new wave at
    some point based on the knowledge of the wave
    front that preceded it

11
Huygens Principle, cont.
  • All points on a given wave front are taken as
    point sources for the production of spherical
    secondary waves, called wavelets, which propagate
    in the forward direction with speeds
    characteristic of waves in that medium
  • After some time has elapsed, the new position of
    the wave front is the surface tangent to the
    wavelets

12
Huygens Construction for a Plane Wave
  • At t 0, the wave front is indicated by the
    plane AA
  • The points are representative sources for the
    wavelets
  • After the wavelets have moved a distance c?t, a
    new plane BB can be drawn, which is the tangent
    to the wavefronts

13
Huygens Construction for a Spherical Wave
  • The inner arc represents part of the spherical
    wave
  • The points are representative points
  • The new wavefront is tangent at each point to the
    wavelet

14
Huygens Principle and the Law of Reflection
  • The Law of Reflection can be derived from
    Huygens Principle
  • AA is a wave front of incident light
  • The reflected wave front is CD

15
Huygens Principle and the Law of Reflection,
cont.
  • Triangle ADC is congruent to triangle AAC
  • ?1 ?1
  • This is the Law of Reflection

16
Huygens Principle and the Law of Refraction
  • sinq1v1t/d (yellow triangle)
  • sinq2v2t/d (green triangle)

The geometrical derivation of the law of
refraction (Snells law).
17
Huygens Principle and the Law of Refraction,
cont.
Air
  • Every point on a wave front can be considered to
    be a source of secondary waves. The figure
    explains the refraction at an interface between
    media with different optical densities.

Medium 1
18
Huygens Principle and the Law of Refraction,
cont.
n1sinq1n2sinq2
19
22.8 Total Internal Reflection and Fiber Optics
  • Total internal reflection. When light enters a
    less optically dense medium, it is refracted away
    from the normal. At a critical angle ?c, the
    light is reflected along the interface. At angles
    greater than ?c, there is total internal
    reflection.

20
Total Internal Reflection
  • Rays of laser light enter the water in the
    fishbowl from above they are reflected at the
    bottom by mirrors tilted at slightly different
    angles, and one ray undergoes total internal
    reflection at the air-water interface.

Total internal reflection
21
Critical Angle
  • n1sin?1 n2sin?2
  • If q290?
  • sin?21 ? q1qc
  •  

Critical angle
sin?cn2/n1 (for n1gtn2)
For ray 4, q2 is 90? ? Total internal reflection
starts
22
Critical Angle, cont.
  • For angles of incidence greater than the critical
    angle, the beam is entirely reflected at the
    boundary
  • This ray obeys the Law of Reflection at the
    boundary (ray 5 in the previous picture)
  • Total internal reflection occurs only when light
    attempts to move from a medium of higher index of
    refraction to a medium of lower index of
    refraction

23
Fiber Optics
Fiber-optic cable
  • Internal reflection is the basis of fiber optics.

Very important for modern data transfer and
communication systems ? phones!  
Total internal reflection
24
Optical fiber communication system
Decoder
Electrical/optical converter
Electric signal
Optical/electrical converter
Fiber
Encoder
Repeater
Digital encoding scheme for optical
communications
One
Zero
High-power pulse ? one Low-power pulse ? zero
High-power pulse ? One
25
Step-index Fiber
Step in the refractive index
In
Disadvantage Pulse broadening
Intensity
Out
Time
26
Graded-index fiber
Pulse broadening is not so severe
Refractive index vary parabolically across the
cross-section
Intensity remains almost constant
In
Out
Time
27
Graded-index Fiber, cont.
  • In the graded-index fiber, light rays that
    traverse longer path lengths through the outer
    periphery of the core travel faster in this lower
    index material ? all rays arrive at the same time
    at the output ? almost no pulse broadening!

28
Fibers, Summary
  • Step-index optical fibers are used for cheap
    short-range applications
  • Graded-index fibers are used for long-range
    high-quality data transfer
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