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Why is the sky blue?

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Why is the sky blue? How do rainbows work? Total internal reflection can occur when light attempts to move from a medium with a high index of refraction to one with a ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Why is the sky blue?


1
  • Why is the sky blue?
  • How do rainbows work?

2
Chapter 14
  • Refraction Of Light

3
Specular Reflection
  • Specular reflection is reflection from a smooth
    surface
  • The reflected rays are parallel to each other
  • All reflection in this text is assumed to be
    specular

4
Diffuse Reflection
  • Diffuse reflection is reflection from a rough
    surface
  • The reflected rays travel in a variety of
    directions
  • Diffuse reflection makes the road easy to see at
    night

5
Refraction of Light, cont
  • The incident ray, the reflected ray, the
    refracted ray, and the normal all lie on the same
    plane
  • The angle of refraction, ?2, depends on the
    properties of the medium

6
Following the Reflected and Refracted Rays
  • Ray ? is the incident ray
  • Ray ? is the reflected ray
  • Ray ? is refracted into the lucite
  • Ray ? is internally reflected in the lucite
  • Ray ? is refracted as it enters the air from the
    lucite

7
Why is Light Bent or Refracted?
  • Light is refracted because the speed of light
    varies in different media
  • nair 1.00
  • nglass 1.458 -1.66
  • ndiamond 2.419
  • The speed of light varies in different media
    because of varying time lags in absorption and
    re-emission of light due to electronic structure

8
The Index of Refraction
  • The index of refraction, n, of a medium can be
    defined
  • For a vacuum, n 1
  • For other media, n gt 1
  • n is a unitless ratio
  • When ngt1, light slows down to maintain frequency

9
Indices of Refraction for Various Substances
Chapter 14
10
Refraction
Chapter 14
11
Image Position for Objects in Different Media
Chapter 14
12
Snells Law of Refraction
  • Discovered experimentally
  • n1 sin ?1 n2 sin ?2
  • ?1 is the angle of incidence
  • 30.0 in this diagram
  • ?2 is the angle of refraction

13
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

14
Fig. 22.16, p.697
15
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
  • This phenomena is also known as dispersion

16
Observing the Rainbow
17
Thin Lenses
  • A thin lens consists of a piece of glass or
    plastic, ground so that each of its two
    refracting surfaces is a segment of either a
    sphere or a plane
  • Lenses are commonly used to form images by
    refraction in optical instruments

18
Thin Lens Shapes
  • These are examples of converging lenses
  • They have positive focal lengths
  • They are thickest in the middle

19
More Thin Lens Shapes
  • These are examples of diverging lenses
  • They have negative focal lengths
  • They are thickest at the edges

20
Focal Length of Lenses
  • The focal length, ƒ, is the image distance that
    corresponds to an infinite object distance
  • This is the same as for mirrors
  • A thin lens has two focal points, corresponding
    to parallel rays from the left and from the right
  • A thin lens is one in which the distance between
    the surface of the lens and the center of the
    lens is negligible

21
Focal Length of a Converging Lens
  • The parallel rays pass through the lens and
    converge at the focal point
  • The parallel rays can come from the left or right
    of the lens

22
Focal Length of a Diverging Lens
  • The parallel rays diverge after passing through
    the diverging lens
  • The focal point is the point where the rays
    appear to have originated

23
Farsighted and Nearsighted
Chapter 14
24
Lens Equations
  • The equations can be used for both converging and
    diverging lenses
  • A converging lens has a positive focal length
  • A diverging lens has a negative focal length

25
Lens Equations
  • The geometric derivation of the equations is very
    similar to that of mirrors

26
Lens Imaging
Lens Type Object Beyond Focal Point Object At Focal Point Object Between Focal Point And Lens
Converging (convex) Real Inverted Reduced Image No Image Formed Erect Virtual Magnified Image
Diverging (concave) Virtual Erect Reduced Image Virtual Erect Reduced Image Virtual Erect Reduced Image
27
Sign Conventions for Thin Lenses
Quantity Positive When Negative When
Object location (p) Object is in front of the lens Object is in back of the lens
Image location (q) Image is in back of the lens (real image) Image is in front of the lens (virtual image)
Image height (h) Image is upright Image is inverted
Magnification Image is upright Image is inverted
Focal length (f) Converging lens Diverging lens
28
Ray Diagram for Converging Lens, p gt f
  • The image is real
  • The image is inverted

29
Ray Diagram for Converging Lens, p lt f
  • The image is virtual
  • The image is upright

30
Ray Diagram for Diverging Lens
  • The image is virtual
  • The image is upright

31
Ray Diagrams for Thin Lenses
  • Ray diagrams are essential for understanding the
    overall image formation
  • Three rays are drawn
  • The first ray is drawn parallel to the first
    principle axis and then passes through (or
    appears to come from) one of the focal lengths
  • The second ray is drawn through the center of the
    lens and continues in a straight line
  • The third ray is drawn from the other focal
    point and emerges from the lens parallel to the
    principle axis
  • There are an infinite number of rays, these are
    convenient

32
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

33
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

34
Total Internal Reflection
  • Total internal reflection can occur when light
    attempts to move from a medium with a high index
    of refraction to one with a lower index of
    refraction
  • Ray 5 shows internal reflection

When the incident angle is equal to the critical
angle, total internal reflection occurs
35
Critical Angle
  • A particular angle of incidence will result in an
    angle of refraction of 90
  • This angle of incidence is called the critical
    angle
  • n1sin?cn2sin90
  • Therefore
  • sin?c n2
  • n1

Calculate the critical angle for a Plastic light
guide, n1.49
36
Fiber Optics
  • An application of internal reflection
  • Plastic or glass rods are used to pipe light
    from one place to another
  • Applications include
  • medical use of fiber optic cables for diagnosis
    and correction of medical problems
  • Telecommunications
  • Internet
  • Dash board lighting

37
Fig. 22.29, p.705
38
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

39
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

40
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 tangent to the
    wavefronts

41
Huygens Construction for a Spherical Wave
  • The inner arc represents part of the spherical
    wave
  • The points are representative points where
    wavelets are propagated
  • The new wavefront is tangent at each point to the
    wavelet

42
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

43
Dispersion
  • The index of refraction in anything except a
    vacuum depends on the wavelength of the light
  • This dependence of n on ? is called dispersion
  • Snells Law indicates that the angle of
    refraction when light enters a material depends
    on the wavelength of the light

44
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

45
Huygens Principle and the Law of Reflection, cont
  • Triangle ADC is congruent to triangle AAC
  • ?1 ?1
  • This is the Law of Reflection

46
Huygens Principle and the Law of Refraction
  • In time ?t, ray 1 moves from A to B and ray 2
    moves from A to C
  • From triangles AAC and ACB, all the ratios in
    the Law of Refraction can be found
  • n1 sin ?1 n2 sin ?2

47
Refraction of Light
  • When a ray of light traveling through a
    transparent medium encounters a boundary leading
    into another transparent medium, part of the ray
    is reflected and part of the ray enters the
    second medium
  • The ray that enters the second medium is bent at
    the boundary
  • This bending of the ray is called refraction

48
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
  • 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

49
Fig. 22.12, p.694
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