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The Bending of Light and Lenses Chapter 18 and 19.

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Presentation on theme: "The Bending of Light and Lenses Chapter 18 and 19."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Bending of Light and Lenses Chapter 18 and 19

2 Refraction  The bending of light due to a change in speed when switching medium  Why a straw appears to break when its in a glass of water  Bends towards the normal when the new medium is slower (ex. From air to glass)  Bends away from the normal when the new medium is faster (ex. From water to air)

3 Waves and Refraction  Since frequency cannot change, but speed does, then wavelength must change as a wave enters a new medium  Wavelength is less in glass than in a vacuum  Different frequencies of light refract differently (this is how a prism works)

4 Total Internal Reflection  If the angle of refraction is high enough, it becomes impossible for light to escape the medium  It always gets bent back into it  This is called the critical angle  Creates the illusion that all light is reflected back into the medium  Used in fiber optics (much more efficient than current energy carrying methods)

5 Mirages  Hot air near the ground causes light rays to refract back up  Your eye perceives this as a reflection  Since there is a “reflection” your mind tells you the ground must be wet, even though it isn’t

6 Dispersion  As white light passes through a prism, it is separated into its different colored frequencies  This is because refraction is caused by how the light interacts with molecules in the glass (or other medium)  The interactions for violet light are more because it has more energy, therefore it takes longer to get through the glass and refracts more than the red light  Rainbows are the result of drops of water dispersing light  Although each drop disperses all the colors, only one color from each drop makes it to your eye

7 Lenses  A piece of transparent material that bends light rays to a focus to create an image  2 types:  Concave  Curve in  Make virtual images on the same side of lenses as the object (d i is negative)  Convex  Curve out  Make real images if object is beyond the focal point (d i is positive)  Make virtual images if object is between focal point and lens (d i is negative)

8 Ray Diagrams  A diagram to show where and how an image from a lens is formed  Only need to draw 2 rays: one that passes through the focal point on its way to the lens and one that gets refracted through the focal point on the other side of the lens

9 Lens Abberations  Defects caused by looking through lenses  Spherical aberration  Slight differences in where light rays focus once they pass through a curved lens  Chromatic aberration  Differences in how colors of light are bent differently, resulting in the different colors having different focal points

10 Interference  Waves in the same place at the same time  Can be:  Incoherent  All in different phases  Appears as white light  Coherent  Waves combine into smooth wave fronts  Results in constructive interference and waves with larger amplitudes (more energy)

11 Double Slit Experiment  Supported the wave theory of light  Alternating bands of light are formed when light passes through a double-slit because some undergoes constructive interference and some undergoes destructive interference

12 Thin-Film Interference  Occurs because of a combination of reflection and refraction off of multiple surfaces (like a soap bubble or gas on the ground)  Some frequencies get cancelled and some don’t, resulting in the iridescent (rainbow) effect that you see

13 Diffraction  Waves bend for some reason other than a change in medium  Usually passing through a hole or around a barrier  Amount of diffraction changes based on wavelength and size of obstacle


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