Title: Refraction
1Refraction
- Refraction
- Total Internal Reflection
- Dispersion
2Reading Question
To prepare for class today I read
1. 0 to 20 2. 20 to 40 3. 40 to 60 4. 60 to
80 5. 80 to 100
3Reading Question
Outside of class I use the Workbook
1. Never 2. A little 3. Some 4. A lot
4Reading Question
The reading for today covered
1. reflection 2. refraction 3. total internal
reflection 4. dispersion 5. 1 and 2 6. 2, 3, and 4
5Refraction
- Refraction
- On the table you will find a plastic block. Take
a clean sheet of paper and place the plastic
block in the center and draw an outline of the
block. Remove the block and draw a normal to the
front surface (larger) near the center of the
face. Label the normal N. Place the plastic
block back in the outline. Get the light box and
position the box so that the beam strikes the
surface at the normal and making an angle of
about 200 to 300 to the normal. Observe the beam
inside the plastic block.
6Refraction
- Observe the beam inside the plastic block. Does
the beam bend toward the normal or away from the
normal?
Towards the normal.
light box
N
7Refraction
- Slowly change the incident angle to 400 to 500
and observe the transmitted or refracted beam.
Does it behave the same way as for the smaller
angle? -
- The plastic is said to be denser than air. This
is an optical density and just means that the
index of refraction is greater. What is the
index of refraction for air? - index of refraction of air _______
- Write a statement that describes the light beam
as it passes from a less dense to a more dense
material. -
yes
1.0
When passing into a more dense material the
beam bends toward the normal
8Refraction
- Return the light box so that the beam makes an
angle of about 500 to the normal and trace a line
on the paper for the incident beam and the
refracted beam. Use a protractor and measure the
angles. Use Snells law to find the index of
refraction for the plastic block. -
9Refraction
10Refraction
11Refraction
- Remove the plastic block and draw a normal to the
back surface near the center of the face.
Replace the block and position the beam so that
the beam hits the front surface, passes through
the block, and emerges from the back surface at
the normal to the surface. Now we will study the
beam as it leaves the block. Does the beam bend
toward or away from the normal as it emerges from
the block?
N
12Refraction
- Write a statement that describes a light beam as
it passes from a more dense to a less dense
material. - Does this agree with Snells law?
When passing from a more dense material into a
less dense material the beam bends away from
the normal
13Student Workbook
14Student Workbook
15Refraction
- Lets look at a typical refraction problem. At
the front of the room is a fish tank full of
water with a coin on the bottom. Walk up and
observe the coin through the top water surface.
Compare the coin in the water to the coin on the
table beside the tank. Do they appear to be at
the same depth or distance below the surface?
Which coin looks deeper or farther away?
16Refraction
- Lets see if we can understand this. Below is a
drawing of the coin and tank. Assume that air
has an index of refraction of 1.0 and that water
has an index of refraction of 1.33. In the
drawing you see a light beam leaving the coin and
striking the surface at an angle of 500. - Use Snells law and find the emerging beam.
17Refraction
- Use Snells law and find the emerging beam.
- Use a protractor the draw the refracted beam.
medium 2 air
590
medium 1 water
400
18Refraction
- When your eye sees the refracted beam your brain
interprets the beam as coming in a straight line.
Extend the refracted beam back into the water in
a straight line. Your brain thinks the coin is
somewhere along this line. To find where we need
another beam.
medium 2 air
590
medium 1 water
400
19Refraction
- We will use RAYTRACE. It is much easier.
20Refraction
- Calculate the percent that the coin appears to be
to the actual depth of the coin. - The coin appears to be only _____ per cent as
deep as it really is. - Is this depth constant or does it depend on the
angle you view the coin?
21Student Workbook
22Refraction
23Refraction
24Class Question
A light ray travels from medium 1 to medium 3 as
shown. For these media,
1. n3 lt n1. 2. n3 n1. 3. n3 gt n1. 4. We
cant compare n1 to n3 without knowing n2.
25Class Question
A light ray travels from medium 1 to medium 3 as
shown. For these media,
1. n3 lt n1. 2. n3 n1. 3. n3 gt n1. 4. We
cant compare n1 to n3 without knowing n2.
26Refraction
- Total Internal Reflection
- Get the plastic from the box on the table. Place
the plastic on a clean sheet of paper with the
triangular shaped end toward you and the larger
flat side to your right. Trace the shape of the
object on the paper. Remove the object and draw
a normal to the flat surface near the center of
the flat side. Place the plastic back in
position and position the beam so that the beam
exits the flat side along the normal. Now slowly
move the beam to the left about 100 so that the
beam exits at the normal. Trace the refracted
beam. Move the beam to 200, 300, and so on until
the refracted beam is parallel to the flat
surface. Mark the incident beam when the
refracted beam is parallel to the surface by
marking the point where the laser beam strikes
the plastic and drawing a line from this point to
where the beam exits the plastic.
27Refraction
- Measure the incident angle and calculate the
index of refraction for the plastic. - incident angle _________
- index of refraction ______
28Refraction
- Total Internal Reflection
29Refraction
- Total Internal Reflection
30Refraction
31Refraction
- Total internal Reflection
Fiber optical cable
32Refraction
33Refraction
Dispersion
34Refraction
- We will use RAYTRACE to study dispersion.
Refractive index, n
Red Green Blue
1.516 1.528 1.537
35Reflection, Refraction, Dispersion
36Refraction
We will use RAYTRACE to show that the maximum
angle is 42 degrees.
37Refraction
Double rainbow
38(Not due to )Refraction
Why is the sky blue?
39Student Workbook
40Student Workbook
41Student Workbook
42(Not due to )Refraction
- Polarization by Reflection
43Refraction
Rainbow