Title: Electromagnetic Waves
1Electromagnetic Waves
2So far
- We have discussed
- The nature of EM waves
- Some of the properties of EM waves.
- Now we will discuss
- EM waves and optics
- Mirrors
- Lenses
- Applications
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4Reflection Refraction
5Reflection
6Light Reflection
- Angles of incidence measured from the NORMAL to
the mirror. - For reflection The angle of incidence equals
the angle of reflection.
7Principle of Least Time
8The light rays appear to come from behind the
mirror.
An image is virtual if the light rays from a
point on the object are directed as if they
diverged from a point on the image, even though
the rays do not actually pass through the image
point.
Your eye focuses the diverging rays reflected by
the mirror.
9Mirror, Mirror, on the wall, how big do you have
to be to see it all? The strange world of images.
10The speed of light
- Light travels at a speed c in a vacuum.
- In an actual material, it travels a bit slower,
at a velocity of v. - The speed of light depends on the material
through which it is traveling. - DEFINITION INDEX OF REFRACTION (or refractive
index)
11Index of Refraction
12Notice
For two materials
13Huygens Principle
Each point on a wavefront acts as a secondary
source of spherical waves that progress from
the source at the speed of light (whatever it may
be). A spherical wave with very large
radius, behaves as a plane wave.
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15.
Not there yet!
16The Wave Nature of Light
- The law of refraction is explained by Huygens
Principle
The little wavelets move slower in medium 2 than
in medium 1. Doing the tangent shows how the
wave fronts bend.
17Some Geometry
18The Wave Nature of Light
19Snells Law of Refraction
Law of Reflection
20Another ViewOf Reflection(Huygens)
21Both Together
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23At the critical angle and beyond, only reflection
is possible.
24Total Reflection Optical Fiber
25A cross section of a submarine communications
cable.1 - Polyethylene2 - Mylar tape3 -
Stranded steel wires4 - Aluminium water
barrier5 - Polycarbonate6 - Copper or aluminum
tube7 - Petroleum jelly8 - Optical fibers
Lengths of 100 KM are possible before
amplification is necessary. Thousands of
conversations can be carried on a single fiber.
26Polarization
Waves on a string.
27dichroism
80
1 of opposite polarization
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32Mirage
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