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Chapter 16 Light. Objectives Chapter 16 Recognize that light is the visible portion of an entire range of electromagnetic frequencies. Describe the ray.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 16 Light. Objectives Chapter 16 Recognize that light is the visible portion of an entire range of electromagnetic frequencies. Describe the ray."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 16 Light

2 Objectives Chapter 16 Recognize that light is the visible portion of an entire range of electromagnetic frequencies. Describe the ray model of light. Solve problems involving the speed of light. Define luminous intensity, luminous flux, and illuminance. Solve illumination problems

3 Objectives Chapter 16 Explain the formation of color by light and pigments and dyes Explain the cause and give examples of interference in thin films. Describe methods of producing polarized

4 Electromagnetic Waves

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8 Visible Spectrum Red has longest wavelength (700 nm) Violet has shortest (400 nm) ROYGBIV Green is most sensitive to eye Visible Light is right on the bubble of Ionizing Radiation

9 Speed of Light 3.00 x 10 8 m/s, c (symbol for speed of light) – In a vacuum. Light slows down when it has to weave its way through matter C = wavelength times frequency What is the frequency of red light? Green light? Who hears a baseball hit first? Radio listener or fan in stands? Satellite 22,300 miles away

10 Sources of Light Everything gives off EM radiation, not everything gives off visible light. The hotter an object, the higher the frequency of EM radiation Produce visible light: Luminous Reflect visible light: Illuminated

11 Light Terms Luminous flux: Rate at which visible light is emitted from a source (symbol P) – The unit is the lumen, seen on shelves. Illuminance: The illumination of a surface – How well does it reflect the light that its it off? Measured in lux Different types of paper have different lux values (how white is the paper)

12 Light Terms Candela: SI unit of light. Measures the luminous intensity of something in a 1 meter squared sphere 1 meter away

13 Light and Matter Transparent: Transmit Light Waves without distorting image Translucent: Allow light through but distort image (lamp shade, frosted glass) Opaque: No light waves – All above discussing VISIBLE spectrum. An object can be transparent to visible and opaque to another

14 Color Color of material depends just as much on the light that hits it as the material itself (if not more)

15 Primary Colors RED + GREEN =YELLOW RED+ BLUE = MAGENTA GREEN + BLUE = CYAN When red, blue, and green light are projected onto a screen, the overlapping areas appear different colors. Where all the three overlap, white is produced. Additive primary colors are red, blue, and green because these colors produce the highest number of different colors.

16 28.6: Complementary Colors When two colors are added together to produce white, they are called complementary colors. YELLOW + BLUE =WHITE ( Yellow a combination of Green + Red ) MAGENTA + GREEN = WHITE ( Magenta a combination of red + blue) CYAN + RED = WHITE ( Cyan a combination of green+ blue)

17 Color Subtraction Dyes: Capable of absorbing/reflecting certain types of light Pigment: Same as dye, just larger – Distinction is molecular A Red pigment looks red under white light because it absorbs Blue and Green A Yellow pigment looks Yellow under white light because it absorbs Blue

18 Blue BLUE An Impure Blue pigment reflects not only blue light, but also colors to either side of blue namely, green and violet. It absorbs red orange and yellow light. Red, orange, and yellow have been subtracted from the incident light.

19 Light transmitting through pure blue glass

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24 Light Models

25 Other Information Nitrogen and oxygen molecules ring like tiny bells with high frequency when energized by sunlight. Reemit light in all directions like the sound of a bell. Atom Scattered Radiation Incident Beam

26 Other Information Ultraviolet light from the sun is absorbed by the protective layer of the ozone gas. Visible frequencies of violet light is scattered. Although the violet light is scattered more, our eyes are more sensitive to blue. That’s why we see a blue sky.

27 Other Information

28 Lower frequencies of light are scattered the least by nitrogen and oxygen molecules  Red, orange, yellow are transmitted more readily through the atmosphere Light of lower frequencies is transmitted while light of higher frequencies are scattered

29 Other Information At dawn and sunset, the sunlight reaches the earth at a longer path At noon, the light travels the shortest distance Red light (and OY) is scattered as the path of the sunlight becomes longer

30 Other Information Water is transparent to almost all the visible frequencies of light. The color is actually the reflected color of the sky Red is absorbed (more)by the molecules in the water, leaving a reflection of greenish-blue dominant hue


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