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Optics
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Introduction Geometrical Optics Physical Optics Modern Optics Fundamental of Light Wave –Description E(r,t) = A(r)cos[ωt – kr] or E(r,t) = A(r)e -i[ωt – kr] –Velocity of propagation –Intensity –Wavelength and spectrum For visible light: 390 ~ 760 nm
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Huygen’s Principle Each point in a wave surface is a secondary source of waves, emitting secondary waves (wavelet) A new wave surface is tangent to all secondary waves Light rays are directed lines that are always perpendicular to the surface occupied by the disturbance at a given time and point along the direction of its motion
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Reflection and Refraction of Plane Waves Direction of all waves are all in one plane Incident Angle = Reflection Angle Snell’s law sin θi /sin θr = n 21 sin θi /sin θr = n 21 Or n 1 sin θi = n 2 sin θr Or n 1 sin θi = n 2 sin θr where n = c/v is the index of refraction of a given medium where n = c/v is the index of refraction of a given medium
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Reflection and Refraction of Spherical Waves A spherical wave fall on a plane surface, the reflected waves are spherical and symmetrical The refracted wave are not spherical, and the refracted rays intersect at several points along the surface normal
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Wave Geometry Elaborate the phenomena of reflection and refraction from the geometrical point of view The process are only reflections and refractions and no other changes occur at the wave surface The geometrical treatment is adequate so long as the surfaces and other discontinuity are very larger compared with the wavelength
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Image Formation of a Pinhole Camera When the size of hole d is sufficiently small, a good image is formed When d is large, the image is blurred When d is too small such that it is comparable with the wavelength, the image is affected by the diffraction effect
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Reflection at a Spherical Surface Decartes’ formula for reflection at a spherical surface 1/p + 1/q = 2/r Focus and focal length f = r / 2 Concave and convex surfaces Spherical aberration
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Refraction at a Spherical Surface Decartes’ formula for refraction at a spherical surface n 1 /p – n 2 /q = (n 1 – n 2 ) /r Object focus and image focus fo = r * n 1 /(n 1 – n 2 ) fi = -r * n 2 /(n 1 – n 2 )
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Sign Conventions for a Spherical Refracting Surface + - Radius r ConcaveConvex Focus fo ConvergentDivergent Object p RealVirtual Image q VirtualReal
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Example A concave surface whose radius is 0.5 m separates a medium whose index of refraction is 1.2 m from another whose index is 1.6. An object is placed in the first medium at 0.8 m from the surface. Determine the focal lengths, the position of the image, and magnification.
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Lenses A lens is a transparent medium bounded by two curved surfaces Decartes’ formula for a thin lens 1/p – 1/q = (n – 1) * (1/r 2 – 1/r 1 ) Object focal length 1/f = (n – 1) * (1/r 2 – 1/r 1 ) 1/f = (n – 1) * (1/r 2 – 1/r 1 ) Convergent and divergent lenses Spherical aberration Magnification M = q / p
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Example A spherical lens has two convex surfaces of radii 0.8 m and 1.2 m. Its index of refraction is n = 1.5. Find its focal length and the position of the image of a point 2.0 m from the lens.
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Optical Instrument Magnifying glass M = q / f Microscope M = δL/ff’ Telescope Angular magnification M = f / f’ Resolving power β = 1.22 λ / D Where D is the diameter of objective lens
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The Prism –A medium bounded by two plane surfaces making an angle (A) –Minimum value of deviation satisfies i = (δ min + A) / 2 Where i is the incident angle and δ min is the minimum value of deviation Where i is the incident angle and δ min is the minimum value of deviation
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Dispersion Dispersion Medium index of refraction depends on frequency Dispersion Each component wavelength will be refracted through a different angle Dispersion in a Prism D = dδ / dλ = dδ / dn * dn / dλ D = dδ / dλ = dδ / dn * dn / dλ D = 2 sin(A/2) / cos([δ min + A] / 2) * (-2B/λ 3 ) D = 2 sin(A/2) / cos([δ min + A] / 2) * (-2B/λ 3 )
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Fermat’s Principle In traveling from one point to another the ray choose the path for which the propagation time has a minimum value Reflection at spherical surface
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