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WHAT IS LIGHT? INTRODUCTION
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CAMERA ON A PILL Read page What is this got to do with optics?
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What does optics mean? Physical properties of light
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Light and Colour Why does bright lights seem to make things more vivid at night?
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U2 360 Tour
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How can white light allow us to see objects with so much colour
How can white light allow us to see objects with so much colour? Why is the sky blue?
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Reasons: White light contains all of the colours of the rainbow.
The sky is blue because the particles like water vapour in the air reflect the colour blue and absorb all the other colours found in white light
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Sources of Light
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1) Natural Sources of Light
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SUN! most important natural source of light
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Other Stars
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Lightning
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Fires
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Bioluminescence ability of organisms to produce light
90 % of all sea creatures can in very deep water no light reaches use light to see prey scare predators camouflage some produce their own some contain bacteria that produce light
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angler fish long spine with a bulb used as a lure to attract prey
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Jellyfish use light to attract fish into their tentacles
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Flashlight fish use light to help to keep in a school
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Fireflies attract mates by chemical reactions
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2) Artificial Light
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Incandescent Light produced by metals at very high temperatures
bulbs contain a filament or thin wire (tungsten) uses electricity to heat up filament emits light as a way to release some energy as a glow
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Fluorescent Light bulb such as gas such as mercury vapour
mercury vapour is exposed to electricity which emits UV light bulb is coated with a white powder called phosphor phosphor glows after exposed to UV radiation
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Compact Fluorescent Bulbs
even though compact fluorescent lights are more efficient than incandescent light bulbs, still 80% of energy is converted into heat
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Phosphorescent Light ability to store energy from radiation
different from fluorescent since phosphor needs UV light phosphorescent materials glow in the dark for some time after being energized by light glow in the dark will fade but can re-energize with a light source
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Chemiluminescence light produced from chemical reactions (no heat or temperature change) “cool light” bioluminescence are also forms ex. luminol used in forensics: glows when it reacts to iron in blood ex. glow sticks
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How Glow Sticks Work
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Triboluminescence light producing from friction
rubbing crystals together quartz used in rattles in Aboriginal people flashes light breaking crystals or rubbing diamonds
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Electric Discharge produce light using electric current through air or another gas halogen gases used often ex. carbon-arc involves passing a current through the air between 2 rods
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