Conceptual Physics 11th Edition

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 26 Properties of Light.
Advertisements

Light (and the electromagnetic spectrum)
Chapter 26 Properties of Light Sources of light Luminous –Producing light –The Sun (luminous) versus the Moon (nonluminous) Incandescent –Glowing with.
Chapter 14 Light and Color.
Electromagnetic Waves
Light and Color Chapters 27 – 28 Created by N. Ferreira with the help of A, Kirby.
Light and Color Chapters 27 – 28
Waves 1 What are waves? Different types of waves carry signals to televisions and radios. Sound and light waves move all around you and enable you to hear.
Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley Light and Optical Phenomenon Light and Colors Physics 102 Goderya Chapter(s):
Forces and Motion Essential Vocabulary
© 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 26: PROPERTIES OF LIGHT.
Light Review Are light waves and sound waves part of the same scale? –No. Sound waves are mechanical, need a medium, and vibrate matter. Light.
Chapter 26 Properties of Light. Chapter 26 Properties of Light.
27 Light The electromagnetic spectrum consists of radio waves, microwaves, infrared, light, ultraviolet rays, X-rays, and gamma rays Electromagnetic.
Chapter 27 Properties of Light Light Photons ElectromagneticRadiation.
Light Chapter 19.
Light Chapter 27.
Light and Color Light one candle and chase away the night.
The most famous and accurate 1880 C = 186, miles per second, plus or minus 3.6 feet per sec. C = 299, kilometers per second, plus or.
1 Lecture series for Conceptual Physics, 8 th Ed..
Light Physics Ms. Johnson. Early Concepts Most philosophers and scientists believed light consisted of particles Christian Huygens was the first to argue.
What is light? An electromagnetic wave that can be seen by the human eye. Can travel either in matter or empty space.
Chapter 26 Properties of Light. Origin and Nature of Light Light originates with accelerated motion of electrons. It is an electromagnetic wave phenomenon.
Chapter 27 Outline Mr. Gaydos April 29, Chapter 27 Outline Major Topics I. Introduction II. Early Concepts of Light III. The Speed of Light IV.
27 Light Light is the ONLY thing you see! All visible objects either emit or reflect light.
1 Lecture series for Conceptual Physics, 8 th Ed..
Physics 1051: Lecture 4: Slide 1 Light Introduction.
Light is the ONLY thing you see! All visible objects either emit or reflect light.
Light The only thing we see! buckleyc/light.htm.
Chapter 26 Properties of Light. Visible light originates with accelerated motion of electrons. It is an electromagnetic wave phenomenon.
Light Mystical, magical What is light?  Light is a curious thing. It is...  the only thing you will ever be able to see  a wave with electric and.
Chapter 7 Light.
1. How fast do x-rays travel through space? 2. What do ultraviolet and gamma rays have in common? 3. A radio wave has a wavelength of 13 m. What is its.
Light Chapter 10. Standards: P4a: Identify the characteristics of electromagnetic and mechanical waves. P4b: Describe how the behavior of light waves.
Properties of Light Light Photons ElectromagneticRadiation.
Light Chapter 16.
LIGHT.
Chapter 28. CHAPTER 28 - COLOR The physicist sees colors as frequencies of light emitted or reflected by things. For example, we see red in a rose when.
Chapter 26 Properties of Light Electromagnetic Waves Traveling, oscillating, electric and magnetic fields which are emitted by vibrating charges. The.
Chapter 11 Light Waves. Electromagnetic Waves The vibrating electric and magnetic fields in space create the em wave. Travel in transverse motion Range.
15.2  Electromagnetic waves need no medium, are produced by moving electrons in a field.  Can be reflected, refracted, diffracted, produce standing.
Copyright © by Holt, Rinehart and Winston. All rights reserved. ResourcesChapter menu Waves and Particles The two most commonly used models describe light.
Light Wave Behaviors and Properties Chart (pg. 76)
Psychology 210 Lecture 4 Kevin R Smith. Vision Sensory System –The eye –Exactly what we sense from our environment Perceptual System –The brain –How we.
Light Chapter 10. Standards: P4a: Identify the characteristics of electromagnetic and mechanical waves. P4b: Describe how the behavior of light waves.
Chapter 27 Outline Mr. Gaydos April 29, Chapter 27 Outline Major Topics I. Introduction II. Early Concepts of Light III. The Speed of Light IV.
Electromagnetic Spectrum: Light
Jeopardy 1234 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Final Jeopardy.
Light. Photon is a bundle of light related to the amount of energy Light travels in straight line paths called light rays
Chapter 14 Properties of Light.
Light. Early concepts of light Light has a dual nature, part particle and part wave. Right now will discuss only the wave nature of light. What_Is_Light_.asf.
Chapter 27 Light. The Definition of Light The current scientific definition of Light is a photon carried on a wave front. This definition incorporates.
© 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Conceptual Physics 11 th Edition Chapter 26: PROPERTIES OF LIGHT.
Explain & Draw each of the following Transparent, translucent, opaque Electromagnetic spectrum Conduction, convection, radiation Open & closed circuit.
Light, Images, and Shadows Chapter 27.4—27.8 Notes.
© 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Conceptual Physics 11 th Edition Chapter 26: PROPERTIES OF LIGHT.
Light. Light is a electromagnetic radiation - a form of energy. Light travels in a straight line. The direction in which light is travelling is known.
Light Electromagnetic and Visible Spectrum. Electromagnetic Waves Consist of changing magnetic and electric fields moving through space at the speed of.
Hewitt/Suchocki/Hewitt Conceptual Physical Science Fourth Edition
Light.
Chapter 27 Properties of Light.
Waves 1 What are waves? Different types of waves carry signals to televisions and radios. Sound and light waves move all around you and enable you to hear.
Waves What are waves? Different types of waves carry signals to televisions and radios. Sound and light waves move all around you and enable you to hear.
Conceptual Physics 11th Edition
“Light is the only thing you see!”
CHAPTER 7: Waves, Sound, Light
Conceptual Physics Fundamentals
Chapter 26 Properties of Light.
Waves 1 What are waves? Different types of waves carry signals to televisions and radios. Sound and light waves move all around you and enable you to hear.
Waves 1 What are waves? Different types of waves carry signals to televisions and radios. Sound and light waves move all around you and enable you to hear.
Presentation transcript:

Conceptual Physics 11th Edition Chapter 26: PROPERTIES OF LIGHT

This lecture will help you understand: Electromagnetic Waves The Electromagnetic Spectrum Transparent Materials Opaque Materials Seeing Light—The Eye

Electromagnetic Waves Light is the only thing we can see. Originates from the accelerated motion of electrons Electromagnetic phenomenon

Electromagnetic Waves Made up of vibrating electric and magnetic fields

Electromagnetic Waves CHECK YOUR NEIGHBOR If an electron vibrates up and down 1000 times each second, it generates an electromagnetic wave with a A. period of 1000 s. speed of 1000 m/s. wavelength of 1000 m. None of the above. D. none of the above.

Electromagnetic Waves CHECK YOUR ANSWER If an electron vibrates up and down 1000 times each second, it generates an electromagnetic wave with a A. period of 1000 s. speed of 1000 m/s. wavelength of 1000 m. None of the above. Explanation: The vibrating electron would emit a wave with a frequency of 1000 Hz, which is not in the list above. D. none of the above.

Electromagnetic Spectrum Classification of electromagnetic waves according to frequency Lowest frequency of light we can see appears red. Highest frequency of light we can see appears violet. Higher frequency of light is ultraviolet—more energetic and causes sunburns. Beyond are X-ray and gamma ray. No sharp boundary between regions

Electromagnetic Spectrum CHECK YOUR NEIGHBOR The electromagnetic spectrum spans waves ranging from lowest to highest frequencies. The smallest portion of the electromagnetic spectrum is that of A. radio waves. microwaves. visible light. gamma rays. C. visible light.

Electromagnetic Spectrum CHECK YOUR ANSWER The electromagnetic spectrum spans waves ranging from lowest to highest frequencies. The smallest portion of the electromagnetic spectrum is that of A. radio waves. microwaves. visible light. gamma rays. C. visible light.

Which of these is fundamentally different from the others? Electromagnetic Spectrum CHECK YOUR NEIGHBOR Which of these is fundamentally different from the others? A. Sound waves Light waves Radio waves X-rays A. sound waves.

Which of these is fundamentally different from the others? Electromagnetic Spectrum CHECK YOUR ANSWER Which of these is fundamentally different from the others? A. Sound waves Light waves Radio waves X-rays Explanation: All are electromagnetic waves except sound, which is a mechanical wave. A. sound waves.

Transparent Materials Light is transmitted similarly to sound. Both are vibrations due to a vibrating source.

Transparent Materials How light penetrates transparent material such as glass:

Transparent Materials How light penetrates transparent material such as glass (continued) Electrons or molecules in the glass are forced into vibration. Energy is momentarily absorbed and vibrates the electrons in the glass. This vibrating electron either emits a photon (a corpsucle of light) or transfers the energy as heat. Time delay between absorption and re-emission of energy of vibrating electrons results in a lower average speed of light through a transparent material.

Transparent Materials In glass, infrared waves, with frequencies lower than those of visible light, cause not only the electrons but entire atoms or molecules to vibrate, increasing the temperature of the structure. So we see that glass is transparent to visible light, but not to ultraviolet and infrared light.

Transparent Materials Average speed of light through different materials vacuum—c (300,000,000 m/s) atmosphere—slightly less than c (but rounded off to c) water—0.75 c glass—0.67 c, depending on material diamond—0.41 c

Strictly speaking, the photons of light incident on glass are Transparent Materials CHECK YOUR NEIGHBOR Strictly speaking, the photons of light incident on glass are A. also the ones that travel through and exit the other side. not the ones that travel through and exit the other side. absorbed and transformed to thermal energy. diffracted. B. not the ones that travel through and exit the other side.

Strictly speaking, the photons of light incident on glass are Transparent Materials CHECK YOUR ANSWER Strictly speaking, the photons of light incident on glass are A. also the ones that travel through and exit the other side. not the ones that travel through and exit the other side. absorbed and transformed to thermal energy. diffracted. Explanation: Figure 26.7 illustrates this nicely. The light that exits the glass is not the same light that begins the process of absorption and re-emission. B. not the ones that travel through and exit the other side.

Transparent Materials CHECK YOUR NEIGHBOR Compared with the frequency of illuminating light on a sheet of transparent plastic, the frequency of light that is transmitted A. is slightly less. is the same. is slightly higher. depends on the type of plastic. B. the same.

Transparent Materials CHECK YOUR ANSWER Compared with the frequency of illuminating light on a sheet of transparent plastic, the frequency of light that is transmitted A. is slightly less. is the same. is slightly higher. depends on the type of plastic Explanation: Speed of light in plastic may vary, but the frequency transmitted doesn’t. B. higher.

The average speed of light is less in Transparent Materials CHECK YOUR NEIGHBOR The average speed of light is less in A. air before entering glass. glass. air after emerging from glass. None of the above. B. glass.

The average speed of light is less in Transparent and Opaque Materials CHECK YOUR ANSWER The average speed of light is less in A. air before entering glass. glass. air after emerging from glass. None of the above. B. glass.

Opaque Materials Most things around us are opaque—they absorb light without re-emitting it. Books, desks, chairs, and people are opaque. Vibrations given by light to their atoms and molecules are turned into random kinetic energy—into internal energy. These materials become slightly warmer.

Opaque Materials Metals Light shining on metal forces free electrons in the metal into vibrations that emit their own light as reflection.

Opaque Materials Light incident on dry surfaces bounces directly to your eye. wet surfaces bounces inside the transparent wet region, absorbing energy with each bounce, and reaches your eye darker than from a dry surface.

Opaque Materials Shadows A thin beam of light is often called a ray. When we stand in the sunlight, some of the light is stopped while other rays continue in a straight-line path. We cast a shadow—a region where light rays do not reach.

Opaque Materials Either a large, far-away light source or a small, nearby light source will produce a sharp shadow. A large, nearby light source produces a somewhat blurry shadow.

Opaque Materials There is usually a dark part on the inside and a lighter part around the edges of a shadow. A total shadow is called an umbra and A partial shadow is called a penumbra. A penumbra appears where some of the light is blocked but where other light fills it in. A penumbra also occurs where light from a broad source is only partially blocked.

Opaque Materials In a solar eclipse, because of the large size of the Sun, the rays taper to provide an umbra (total eclipse) and a surrounding penumbra (partial eclipse). In a lunar eclipse, the Moon passes completely into the shadow of Earth.

Seeing Light – The Eye Light is the only thing we see with the most remarkable optical instrument known—the eye. As light enters the eye, it moves through the transparent cover called the cornea, which does about 70% of the necessary bending of the light before it passes through an opening in the iris (colored part of the eye).

Seeing Light – The Eye The opening is called the pupil. The light then reaches the crystalline lens, which fine- tunes the focusing of light that passes through a gelatinous fluid called vitreous humor. Light then passes to the retina, which covers the back two-thirds of the eye and is responsible for the wide field of vision that we experience.

Seeing Light – The Eye For clear vision, light must focus directly on the retina. The retina is not uniform. In the middle is the macula, and a small depression. in the center is the fovea, the region of most distinct vision. Behind the retina is the optic nerve, which transmits signals from the photoreceptor cells to the brain. There is also a spot in the retina where optic nerves are connected; this is the blind spot.

Seeing Light – The Eye Rods handle vision in low light. The retina is composed of tiny antennae that resonate to the incoming light. Rods handle vision in low light. They predominate toward the periphery of the retina. Cones handle color vision and detail. They are denser toward the fovea. There are three types of cones, stimulated by low, intermediate and high frequencies of light.

Seeing Light – The Eye Although our vision is poor from the corner of our eye, we are sensitive to anything moving there.

Seeing Light – The Eye The brightest light that the human eye can perceive without damage is some 500 million times brighter than the dimmest light that can be perceived. Lateral inhibition: We don’t perceive the actual differences in brightness. The brightest places in our visual field are prevented from outshining the rest.

Seeing Light – The Eye The brightest light that the human eye can perceive without damage is some 500 million times brighter than the dimmest light that can be perceived. Lateral inhibition: We don’t perceive the actual differences in brightness. The brightest places in our visual field are prevented from outshining the rest.

Seeing Light – The Eye

Seeing Light – The Eye

Seeing Light – The Eye

Seeing Light – The Eye

Seeing Light – The Eye

Seeing Light – The Eye