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Published byOswald French Modified over 8 years ago
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Producing and Using Light
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Producing Light Incandescent light: creating light by heating a piece of metal until it glows Example: Light bulbs
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Producing Light Fluorescent Lights: lights that use phosphorous and other chemicals to convert ultraviolet radiation to visible light Last longer and use less energy
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Producing Light Neon Lights: use glass tubes filled with gas to create light Neon: red Carbon dioxide: white Helium: yellow Mercury: blue
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Producing Light Sodium-vapor lights: use neon, argon or sodium metals to produce light Example: street lights, outdoor lighting
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Producing Light Tungsten-Halogen Lights: have a tungsten filament inside a quartz tube filled with gas to create intensely bright light Examples: movie sets, underwater photography, headlights
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Producing Light Lasers: produce only one wavelength of light that can be concentrates so that the energy in a small area Uses: medicine, blue-ray players, gaming consoles Lasers smarter every day lasers laser vs baloon
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Using Light Polarized light: light waves that vibrate in only one direction Uses: reducing glare in sun glasses and windows
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Holography Holography: producing a hologram (a complete 3-D image) of an object Made by illuminating objects with a laser lights future of holograms holograms2 how holograms work
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Lenses Lens: a transparent material with curved surfaces that refracts light Examples: camera, microscope, telescope, eye glasses, contacts
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Lenses Optical axis: an imaginary line directly in the center of a lens
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Lenses Focal point: the point on the optical axis where light rays pass through after they enter the lens
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Lenses Focal Length: the distance from the center of the lens to the focal point
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Lenses Convex lenses: light rays converge and pass through a single point Optical Axis
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Lenses Concave Lenses: light rays diverge from the focal point away from the optical axis Optical Axis
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Eye Sight Cornea: a transparent covering on the eye where light enters and bends Retina: the inner lining to the eye where the rods and cones are located and the image gets converted into electrical signals and sent to the brain how we see
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Eyesight Far away objects: the lens of the eye becomes less convex Close objects: the lens of the eye becomes more convex
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Eyesight Farsightedness (hyperopia): distant objects are seen clearly but close objects are out of focus
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Eyesight Nearsightedness (myopia): close objects are seen clearly but distant objects are out of focus
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Eyesight Astigmatism: when the surface of the cornea is uneven and light is scattered on the retina
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Telescopes Refracting telescopes: uses 2 convex lenses to focus light from a distant object
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Telescopes Reflecting Telescopes: uses a concave mirror, a flat mirror and a convex lens Telescopes telescopes 2 telescopes 2 searching for alien life astrobiology
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Microscopes Microscopes: uses two convex lenses to magnify small objects microscopes
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Cameras Cameras: gather and bend light with lenses then record the image
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