Broadneck Physics 2010. Water Corn Syrup Water Vegetable Oil Water.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 15 Pretest Light and Refraction
Advertisements

Law of Reflection (Smooth Surface):
Refraction of Light Chapter 18, Section 1.
L 31 Light and Optics-3 Images formed by mirrors
Bellringer What color would a basketball appear to be if under an orange flashlight? What color would it appear to be if under a red flashlight?
Chapter 26 Geometrical Optics. Units of Chapter 26 The Reflection of Light Forming Images with a Plane Mirror Spherical Mirrors Ray Tracing and the Mirror.
Lenses and Mirrors Mrs. Gergel. Lenses and Mirrors Mrs. Gergel.
Lenses.
Welcome to Optics JEOPARDY PHysics Final Jeopardy Question Reflection Mirrors 100 Lens refraction Special topics.
Chapter 11 Review Mirrors & Lenses. What is an angle of incidence? 2 The angle between an incident ray and the normal of an optical device. Category:
Geometric Optics Conceptual MC Questions. If the image distance is positive, the image formed is a (A) real image. (B) virtual image.
L 33 Light and Optics [3] images formed by mirrors –plane mirrors –curved mirrors Concave (converging) Convex (diverging) Images formed by lenses the human.
1 Optics Electromagnetic spectrum polarization Laws of reflection and refraction TIR –Images –Mirrors and lenses –Real/virtual, inverted/straight, bigger/smaller.
Refraction and Lens. Refraction Refraction: the change in direction of a wave as it crosses the boundary b/w 2 media in which a wave travels different.
Broadneck Physics – Chapter 17 – Refraction of Light
The Refraction of Light: Lenses and Optical Instruments
1 GEOMETRIC OPTICS I. What is GEOMTERIC OPTICS In geometric optics, LIGHT is treated as imaginary rays. How these rays interact with at the interface of.
Lenses Chapter 30.
Refraction and Lenses Light bends--so you can see better!
Refraction. Optical Density  Inverse measure of speed of light through transparent medium  Light travels slower in more dense media  Partial reflection.
Light Chapter 18.
The Refraction of Light: Lenses and Optical Instruments.
Refraction & Lenses Chapter 18. Refraction of Light n Look at the surface of a swimming pool n Objects look distorted n Light bends as it goes from one.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Lecture Outline Chapter 26 Physics, 4 th Edition James S. Walker.
Dr. Andrew Tomasch 2405 Randall Lab
Refraction is the change of direction of a light wave caused by a change in speed as the wave crosses a boundary between materials.
Optics 2: REFRACTION & LENSES. REFRACTION Refraction: is the bending of waves because of the change of speed of a wave when it passes from one medium.
Ch23 Geometric Optics Reflection & Refraction of Light.
A ray is a straight line that represents the linear path of a narrow beam of light (a). A light ray can change direction if it is reflected (b) or refracted.
Refraction and Lenses.
Optical Density - a property of a transparent medium that is an inverse measure of the speed of light through the medium. (how much a medium slows the.
Lesson 25 Lenses Eleanor Roosevelt High School Chin-Sung Lin.
1. How is the index of refraction calculated? How is light refracted as it speeds up? How is light refracted as it slows down? Index of refraction = speed.
Chapter Refraction: Snell’s Law *When light passes from one medium to another, or from one density to another, it changes speed and its path is bent.
Refraction When light passes from one medium to another, it bends.
The Refraction of Light: Lenses and Optical Instruments
© Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company Preview Objectives Refraction of Light The Law of Refraction Sample Problem Chapter 14 Section 1 Refraction.
The Nature of Light. Light Can Act Like Waves or In 1801 Thomas Young an English scientist did an experiment. –Double slit experiment Passed a beam of.
 Mirrors that are formed from a section of a sphere.  Convex: The reflection takes place on the outer surface of the spherical shape  Concave: The.
+. + Lenses and Mirrors Mrs. Gergel + Refraction of light When light rays enter a new medium at an angle the change in speed causes them to bend, or.
Lenses. Refraction (p 308) Refraction occurs when a wave changes the direction in which it is moving This is caused by a change in speed as the wave passes.
Refraction of Light Refraction Refraction –Refraction occurs when light waves traveling from one medium to another with a different density bend. –The.
Copyright © by Holt, Rinehart and Winston. All rights reserved. ResourcesChapter menu Refraction Chapter 14 Table of Contents Section 1 Refraction Section.
 A lens is a transparent object with at least one curved side that causes light to refract  Like mirrors, lenses have surfaces that are described as.
Mirrors.
Chapter 20 Mirrors and Lenses
Chapter 14 Preview Objectives Refraction of Light
Index of Refraction. The ratio of the speed of light in vacuum to the speed of light v in a given material is called the index of refraction, n of the.
ReflectionReflection and Mirrors The Law of Reflection always applies: “The angle of reflection is equal to the angle of incidence.”
Refraction, Lenses, & Color Created by Stephanie Ingle Kingwood High School Revised 5/09 by Susan Butler.
Mav Mark What are forms of the electromagnetic spectrum?
Refraction and Lenses. Refraction is the bending of light as it moves from one medium to a medium with a different optical density. This bending occurs.
Copyright © by Holt, Rinehart and Winston. All rights reserved. ResourcesChapter menu Section 1 Refraction Chapter 14 Refraction of Light The speed of.
Reflection and Refraction of Light From “College Physics” Serway and Faughn with modifications.
Refraction of Light Chapter 18, Section 1. Refraction  When light encounters a transparent or translucent medium, some light is reflected from the surface.
1 REFRACTION OF LIGHT. 2 Chapter 18 Objectives: 1) Define refraction of light including examples. 2) Know which direction a light ray bends as it travels.
Geometrical Optics.
Refraction. Refraction of Light When light waves pass from one medium to the next, its speed changes, causing it to bend. Going from lower to higher index.
Refraction & Lenses. Refraction of Light When a ray of light traveling through a transparent medium encounters a boundary leading into another transparent.
Chapter 32Light: Reflection and Refraction Formation of Images by Spherical Mirrors Example 32-7: Convex rearview mirror. An external rearview car.
Light and Optics Part Three: Optics and Reflection.
-Atmospheric Refraction -Total Internal Reflection
Notes 23.1: Optics and Reflection
Refraction and Lenses.
Refraction and Lenses.
Lenses and Mirrors Mrs. Gergel. Lenses and Mirrors Mrs. Gergel.
Chapter 33 Lenses and Optical Instruments
Mirrors and Lenses.
Refraction, Lenses, & Color
Refraction and Lenses.
Presentation transcript:

Broadneck Physics 2010

Water Corn Syrup Water Vegetable Oil Water

Broadneck Physics 2010 What happens when you shine a narrow beam of light at the surface of a piece of glass? As you can see below, it bends as it crosses the boundary from air to glass. The bending of light, called refraction, was first studied by René Descartes and Willebrord Snell around the time of Kepler and Galileo. Refraction Applet Snell’s Law Song (mp30

Broadneck Physics 2010 Light bends toward the normal as it moves from air to glass and bends away from the normal as it moves from glass to air (a). The bending of light makes objects appear to be shifted from their actual locations (b).

Broadneck Physics 2010 It is simply a RATIO of two velocities…so has no units!

Broadneck Physics 2010

Light moves from air to glass to air again (a). Light slows down and bends toward the normal when it enters a region of a higher index of refraction (b). Higher Index of refraction Lower Index of refraction

Broadneck Physics 2010 Ray A is partially refracted and partially reflected (a). Ray B is refracted along the boundary of the medium and forms the critical angle (b). An angle of incidence greater than the critical angle results in the total internal reflection of Ray C, which follows the law of reflection (c). Critical Angle of Refraction AppletApplet Applet2Applet2

Broadneck Physics 2010 Light impulses from a source enter one end of the optical fiber. Each time the light strikes the surface, the angle of incidence is larger than the critical angle, and, therefore, the light is kept within the fiber. Fiber Optic Cables Like FIOS!)

Broadneck Physics 2010 A mirage is seen on the surface of a road (a). Light from the car bends upward into the eye of the observer (b). The bottom of the wave front moves faster than the top (c).

Broadneck Physics 2010 More Examples of Refraction and it’s Wavelength dependence White light directed through a prism is dispersed into bands of different colors (a). Different colors of light bend different amounts when they enter a medium (b).

Broadneck Physics 2010 Rainbows form because white light is dispersed as it enters, reflects at the inside boundary, and exits the raindrops (a). Because of dispersion, only one color from each raindrop reaches an observer (b). (Illustration not to scale)

Broadneck Physics 2010 Primary Rainbow Secondary Rainbow

Broadneck Physics 2010 Two Refractions and Two reflections (and thus a dimmer rainbow) make a Secondary Rainbow

Broadneck Physics 2010 The refraction of light in nature that forms rainbows and red lunar eclipses is beautiful, but refraction also is useful. In 1303, French physician Bernard of Gordon wrote of the use of lenses to correct eyesight. Around 1610, Galileo used two lenses to make a telescope, with which he discovered the moons of Jupiter. Since Galileo’s time, lenses have been used in many instruments, such as microscopes and cameras. Lenses are probably the most useful of all optical devices.

Broadneck Physics 2010 This is a convex lens because it is thicker at the center than at the edges. A convex lens often is called a converging lens because when surrounded by material with a lower index of refraction it refracts parallel light rays so that the rays meet at a point. This is a concave lens because it is thinner in the middle than at the edges. A concave lens often is called a diverging lens because when surrounded by material with a lower index of refraction rays passing through it spread out.

Broadneck Physics 2010 Another way to think of a lens …. As a group of small prisms!!

Broadneck Physics 2010 Lens Geometry This distance – twice the focal length – is also the radius of curvature of the lens!

Broadneck Physics 2010 Ray Diagrams Converging Lens Applet

Broadneck Physics 2010 Lens (and mirror!) Equations

Broadneck Physics 2010 Using the equations for lenses - It is important that you use the proper sign conventions when using these equations. Table 18-2 shows a comparison of the image position, magnification, and type of image formed by single convex and concave lenses when an object is placed at various object positions, d o, relative to the lens.

Broadneck Physics 2010

A converging lens can focus the parallel rays from the Sun into a single VERY HOT point!

Broadneck Physics 2010 Concave lenses produce only virtual images that are upright and smaller compared to their objects. Concave Lens Applet

Broadneck Physics 2010 The human eye is complex and has many components that must work together.

Broadneck Physics 2010 A nearsighted person cannot see distant objects clearly because images are focused in front of the retina (a). A concave lens corrects this defect (c). A farsighted person cannot see close objects clearly because images are focused behind the retina (b). A convex lens corrects this defect (d).

Broadneck Physics 2010 LASIK Eye Surgery… short for Laser-Assisted in-Situ Keratomileusis