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Mirrors Physics 202 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 22
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PAL #21 EM Waves Two polarizing sheets I 1 = ½ I 0 I 2 = I 1 cos 2 1,2 = ½I 0 cos 2 90 = 0 No light gets through One absorbs all x components, one absorbs all y components Three polarizing sheets I 1 = ½ I 0 I 2 = I 1 cos 2 1,2 I 3 = I 2 cos 2 2,3 = ½I 0 (cos 2 1,2 ) (cos 2 2,3 ) Since neither of the angles is 90, I 3 > 0 What is maximum intensity When 1,2 = 2,3 = 45 degrees I 3 = (0.5) I 0 (0.5)(0.5) = 0.125 I 0
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What is an Image? When you see an object, your eye gathers light rays that are reflected off of it and your brain processes it into an image If the light is refracted or reflected, you see an image of the object at a position different from the actual
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Types of Images Virtual image This is a virtual image Real image If you project an image onto a surface it is called a real image
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Plane Mirrors The images appear to be at a point behind the mirror Light rays will hit the mirror and then reflect at some angle If you trace the reflections back through the mirror they intersect at point I, the image location
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Location of Image The object is at a distance p from the front of the mirror and the image is a distance i behind the mirror and the angle between the reflected ray and the normal is i = -p The image is the same distance behind the mirror as the object is in front of it
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Extended Objects Each point in the image is directly in front of its actual position Example: when you move your right hand your image appears as a person moving his left hand
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Spherical Mirrors A spherical mirror can either be concave (curved in towards the object) or convex (curved out away from the object) A distance r from the mirror The field of view is the area that the mirror reflects
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Concave For a concave mirror: The field of view is smaller than that of a plane mirror The image is farther behind the mirror (|i| > p) Concave mirrors are used to provide magnification (e.g. a shaving or make-up mirror)
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Convex For a convex mirror: The field of view is larger than that of a plane mirror The image is smaller than the object Convex mirrors are used to view large areas (e.g. car side mirrors, security mirrors)
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Focal Point If an object is located an infinite distance from the mirror (e.g. a star) than the light rays are all parallel when they are incident on the mirror For a concave mirror all of the light is focused to a point after reflection, called the focal point or focus The distance to the center of the mirror from the focal point is the focal length (f)
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Focal Point and Convex Mirrors If you trace back the rays they meet at a point behind the mirror called the virtual focus For either mirror the radius of curvature r (the radius of the sphere or the distance to the center of curvature C) is related to the focal length by: f = ½ r
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Images and Concave Mirrors When the object is in front of the focal point (closer to the mirror) a virtual image appears in the mirror When the object is behind the focal point (further from the mirror) the mirror will project a real image in front of the mirror A real image is projected onto something, it is not behind the mirror
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Mirror Equation Where are the images and how large are they? When measuring from the center of the mirror: i is the distance to the image when I and F are on the other side of the mirror i and f are negative They are related by 1/p + 1/i = 1/f
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Magnification If h is the height of the object and h’ is the height of the image then the magnification is given by: |m| = h’/h m = -i/p when m is negative, the image is inverted with respect to the object Remember that i can be positive or negative
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Ray Drawing If you draw two different rays from an object the image will appear at the intersection of the rays An extended object can be found by drawing several pairs of rays When trying to find an image it often helps to draw rays based on 3 rules:
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Next Time Read: 34.7-34.8 Homework: Ch 34, P: 19, 27, 28, 29, 41, 45, 50, 51, 52, 54, 88
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