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Refraction & Lenses Sections 11.7 and 11.8
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Refraction What is Refraction?
when light passes from one material (aka medium) to another, it bends because the speed of light travels at different speeds in different mediums Ex. When light rays move from water into air, they speed up and bend away from the normal (that’s why a fish looks closer to the surface than it really is)
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Light travels thru water
(why we see blue best)
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Light can undergo partial reflection and refraction at the same time at a surface.
Ex. Sunglasses, two way mirrors (buildings = less air conditioning)
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Refraction - Vocabulary
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Lenses – Using Refraction
What is a Lens? A lens is a curved, transparent device that causes light to refract as it passes through Like mirrors, can be convex or concave Many optical devices use more than one lens Ex. A microscope has objective and eyepiece lenses)
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Convex Lenses What does a convex lens look like?
A convex lens is thicker in the middle than at the outside edge (bulges outward) Cause light rays to converge (come together) at a focal point A ray passing straight through the centre of the lens (at a 90˚ angle) will not refract (bend)
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Convex Lenses Usually used to make objects look larger, so long as you have the object close to the lens. Example. A magnifying glass Like concave mirrors, if the object is farther from the lens it will produce an inverted image that can either be larger or smaller depending on how far away it is.
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Concave Lenses What does a concave lens look like?
A concave lens is thinner in the middle than at the outside edge (caved inward) Cause light rays to diverge (spread apart) Like convex lenses, rays passing through the centre will not refract
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Concave Lenses Always produce a smaller, upright image of the object
Not as common as convex lenses Used in some types of eyeglasses (for nearsightedness) and some telescopes
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Summary of Lenses
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