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Light and Color Please fill in your guide sheet as we go through this presentation.
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PROPERTIES OF LIGHT 1. Light Travels in Waves 2. Light behaves like a particle. 3. The speed of light is 300,000 km. per second.
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Light Waves are Transverse Waves: WAVELENGTH
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Frequency of Waves: The number of crests that pass one place each second.(Measured in Hertz)
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Electromagnetic Radiation: Light in different frequencies and wavelengths.
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X-rays : Have a short wavelength and therefore a high frequency.
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Radio Waves have longer wavelengths and therefore lower frequency.
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The visible spectrum of light is a small portion of the EMS.
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Visible Light has 3 primary colors. The Three Primary Colors of Light are Red, Green, and Blue
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Secondary colors are a mix of primary colors of light. The Three Secondary Colors of Light are Yellow, Cyan, and Magenta.
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Yellow, Cyan, and Magenta are the three primary pigments. These can be used to create any color of paint.
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Mixing all three pigments together produces the color black. You may have discovered this in art class or when mixing food colorings.
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Black light is the absence of light.
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White Light is produced when the three primary colors of light are mixed.
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A reflection occurs when a wave strikes an object and bounces off.
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Angle of Incidence Is Equal to the Angle of Reflection
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Question: Theoretically would light infinitely bounce in a room made of perfect mirrors?
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Answer: Yes, light would bounce forever in a room of perfect mirrors. Unfortunately mirrors are not perfect and as a result, not all light will be reflected. Eventually light intensity would decrease.
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Refraction is the bending of light due to a change in speed.
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The speed at which light travels changes in materials of different density. Thus changes in material cause light to refract.
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Light from many sources, such as the sun, appears white. When white light passes through a prism, however, it separates into a spectrum of different colors. The prism bends, or refracts, light of different colors at different angles. Red light bends the least and violet light bends the most.
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SUBSTANCEREFRACTIVE INDEX* Vacuum1.0000 Air1.0003 Ice1.309 Water1.33 Ethyl alcohol1.36 Glass (fused quartz)1.46 Glass (crown)1.52 Sodium chloride (salt)1.54 Zircon1.92 Diamond2.42 * For light with a wavelength of 590 nm (590 x 10 -9 m)
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Diffraction: The bending of waves around a barrier. This can best be seen by examining the outer edge of a shadow.
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Despite what you may think, mirrors don’t make copies of what you are looking at!
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A good example of a pair of images that are mirrored reflections are your left and right hand. They are basically the same, but one is a reversed version of the other.
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The image appears to be beyond the mirror even though we know the mirror is opaque.
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Concave Mirror with real object further than focal length.
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Concave Mirror with real object closer than focal length.
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Convex Mirror
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Convex Lenses are thicker in the middle and thinner at the edges. These are used in projectors.
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Concave lenses are thinner in the middle and make objects appear farther away. They are used to correct nearsighted vision..
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A microscope uses two convex lenses to focus a virtual image that may be hundreds of times bigger than the real image.
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The End! We hope this presentation helped you see the light!
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