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Light 1. Wave Vs. Particles 2. Electromagnetic Waves 3. Frequency and Wavelength 4. Light Vs. Sound 5. Space Travel & The Speed of Light 6. Why Objects Have Color 7. Primary and Secondary Colors 8. Light Colors Vs. Pigments 9. The Electromagnetic Spectrum 10. Human production of visible light •Light Transmission •Luminosity •Polarized Light •Coherent Light •Lasers •Holograms Parts of the Ear Light: Introduction For centuries the nature of light was disputed. In the 17th century, Isaac Newton proposed the “corpuscular theory” stating that light is composed of particles. Other scientists, like Robert Hooke and Christian Huygens, believed light to be a wave. Today we know that light behaves as both a wave and as a particle. Light undergoes interference and diffraction, as all waves do, but whenever light is emitted, it is always done so in discreet of packets called photons. These photons carry momentum, but not mass. Robert Hooke Christian Huygens Isaac Newton Wave Vs. Particles Light is an electromagnetic wave. As light travels through space an electric field and a magnetic field oscillate perpendicular to the wave direction and perpendicular to each other. A light wave is transverse rather than longitudinal, since each field oscillates in a plane perpendicular to the direction of the wave. Unlike a pulse traveling down a length of rope, nothing is physically moving in a light wave. Light requires no medium! It can travel through space that contains matter (such as air, glass, or water) or through a vacuum. - What would happen to Earth if light needed a medium? Electromagnetic Waves Electric and magnetic fields affect charges. Light is an electric field coupled with a magnetic field. The two fields oscillate together but in different planes. Visible light is just a small part of the spectrum. The waves vary length and frequency. Wave Lengths of E.M Spectrum High vs. Low Frequency Electromagnetic Waves (cont.) In the top right picture, the blue wave represents an oscillating magnetic field in the x-y plane. (Every point on this curve has an z coordinate of zero.) It is a snapshot in time. Like the electric field, the magnetic field is strongest at the crests and troughs. Bottom right is shown an electric and a magnetic field oscillating together. This is an electromagnetic wave (light). The fields travel through space together. They have the same period and wavelength, but they oscillate in two different planes, which are perpendicular to each other. The electric field, the magnetic field, and the wave direction are all mutually perpendicular. Frequency and Wavelength The frequency of a light wave corresponds to the color we see. The amplitude corresponds to brightness. Light Sound Frequency Color Pitch Amplitude Brightness Loudness The frequency of visible light is extremely high compared to that of audible sound. Red light, for example, is the lowest frequency of visible light, but even red light has a frequency of over 400 trillion Hertz. This means if you’re looking at a red light, over 400 trillion full cycles of red light enter your eye every second! The frequency of violet light is even higher—over 750 trillion Hz. Other types of electromagnetic radiation, like X-rays, have even higher frequencies, and some have lower frequencies, like radio waves. Just as our ears are only capable of hearing certain range of sounds (20 – 20,000 Hz), our eyes can only see a small range of frequencies. Frequency and Wavelength (cont.) - Which end of the spectrum has more energy? How do you know? High Frequency ↔ Small Wavelength Low Frequency ↔ Long Wavelength Vacuum speed is constant. Light Vs. Sound It is important to emphasize just how fast light is. Compared to light, sound is a snail. A wise person once said, “Light travels faster than sound, which is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.” Have you ever watched a baseball game from a distance? You see the batter make contact with the ball, but the sound of the wallop is delayed. This is because, although sound is really fast, light is super-duper fast. For all practical purposes, when you see something is when it happened (at least for events here on Earth). You can determine how far away a lightning strike is by counting seconds from the time you see the lightning until you hear the thunder. It takes sound about 5 s to travel a mile, so if the thunder lags behind the lightning by 2 or 3 s, then the lightning strike occurred about half a mile away. Space Travel & The Speed of Light We can’t always ignore the time light takes to travel. Whenever you look into the night sky, for example, you’re really looking back into time. The stars you see are so far away that the light they emit takes years to reach us. Nearby stars are tens or hundreds light-years away. A light-year is the distance light travels in one year, almost 6 trillion miles. (Our sun is only about 8 light-minutes away). https://youtu.be/EtsXgODHMWk SOL= 299 792 458 m / s Practice • 1. In the 17th century, Isaac Newton proposed the “corpuscular theory” Describe his theory. • 2. Based on what you know, how would you explain the way frequency and amplitude influence light? • 3. If you where lost in space and had to contact a passing ship to be rescued, what would be the best way to do this? Why? Why Objects Have Color Visible light is a combination of many wavelengths (colors), which give it a white appearance. When light hits an object certain wavelengths are reflected and others are absorbed. The reflected wavelengths are the ones we see and determine the color of an object. In the first picture the tomato absorbs blue and green wavelengths and reflects the red wavelength. In the second picture red light is shone upon the tomato. The tomato is still reflecting the red wavelength and thus still looks red. But in the 3rd picture blue light is shone upon the tomato, and since the tomato absorbs the blue wavelength the tomato appears to be black. Primary and Secondary Colors The primary light colors are Red, Blue, and Green (RGB). The secondary light colors are Yellow, Cyan, and Magenta. Combining pigments in painting is exactly the opposite: The primary pigments are Yellow, Cyan, Magenta. The secondary pigments are Red, Blue and Green. Animation Light Colors Vs. Pigments Primary colors in light are red, green, and blue because when put together in the right intensities they form white light. Televisions use this idea to project pictures on the screen. When lights these colors are combined in pairs they form the secondary colors for light. Pigment colors are seen by reflected light. A primary pigment color is one that absorbs only one primary light color and reflects the other two primary colors. Thus yellow, magenta, and cyan are the primary colors for pigments. Yellow reflects red & green, cyan reflects green & blue, and magenta reflects red & blue. Secondary pigments colors then are blue, green, and red because they absorb two primary light colors and reflect their own light color back. The Electromagnetic Spectrum The electromagnetic spectrum covers a wide range of wavelengths and photon energies. Visible light ranges from 400 to 700 nanometers. About 550 nanometers, which is a yellowish green, is the wavelength to which our eyes are most responsive. Only a small portion of the electromagnetic spectrum is visible to us. The smaller the wavelength, the more energy each photons of the light has. Electromagnetic Spectrum (cont.) Wavelengths other that visible light serve useful purposes: Radio waves are very long (a few centimeters to 6 football fields) and can be used to send signals. These signals are transmitted by radio stations. They transmit information and music via amplitude modulation (AM) and frequency modulation (FM). Microwaves (a few millimeters long) are also used in communications. Microwave ovens are great for heating food since food is primarily water, and microwaves have just the right frequency to get water molecules vibrating. Infrared (micrometers in length) are used in remote controls to change the channel, and they are also radiated by objects that are warmer than their surrounding (like your body). They make night vision equipment possible. Ultraviolet light is harmful to our bodies because its wavelength is so small. Short wavelength mean high energy for photons. UV causes our skin to tan and burn. Fortunately, the ozone layer blocks most UV radiation, but prolonged exposure to the sun should be avoided, since UV rays can cause skin cancer. On the positive side UV radiation helps people to produce their own vitamin D. Electromagnetic Spectrum (cont.) X-rays are even more energetic, and hence more dangerous, than UV rays, but luckily they cannot penetrate our ozone layer. They are produced in space and of course are used by doctors to get pictures of your bones. Gamma rays are the most energetic of the light waves and little is known about them other than they are very harmful to living cells and are used by doctors to kill certain cells and for other operations. They are produced in nuclear explosions. Like other high energy rays, our atmosphere protects us from gamma rays. Astronomers have many different types of telescopes at their disposal to observe the universe in all parts of electromagnetic spectrum. Some telescopes are ground-based; others are space-based: Luminous vs. Illuminated A luminous object is a body that produces its own light such as the sun or a light bulb. An illuminated object is a body that reflects light, just like the moon, people, and buildings. Some objects, like water and glass, transmit light to some extent. In order to be seen, light must come from an object one way or the other. Light Transmission Transparent: Materials, such as window glass, through which light can travel easily and through which other objects can clearly be seen. Translucent: Materials, such as glass blocks, through which light can pass through but no clear image can be seen. Opaque: Materials which absorb and reflect light. Objects cannot be seen through the material. Most objects are opaque. Thin Films & Thin Film Interference The thin film effect refers to colors seen in such things as soap bubbles and oil spills. It occurs as a result of the constructive and destructive interference of light waves, not because of refraction as in a prism. When light hits a bubble, some of it is reflected by the outer (air-soap) interface (ray #1), while some penetrates the bubble wall and is reflected by the inner (soap-air) interface (ray #2). The two reflected rays interfere with one another. Typically, most wavelengths will be out of Guinness Soap Bubble Records phase since #2 has to travel a greater distance than #1. However, one wavelength will be in incident ray phase and this corresponds to the color produced. The color depends on how great the difference in #1 distance is that the two rays travel, and this distance #2 depends on bubble thickness. The variations in reflected thickness (thinner at the top, thicker at the bottom) rays are responsible for the different colors. Continued on Next Slide Soap Bubble Wall Polarized Light Light coming directly from the sun or Electric Field other sources is unpolarized, meaning Orientations the electric and magnetic fields oscillate in many different planes. Polarized light refers to light in which all waves have electric fields oscillating in the same plane. Imagine trying to pass a large piece of sheet metal through the bars of a jail cell. To do this you would have to orient the sheet vertically (or nearly so), otherwise the bars would block the sheet. Here, the bars are analogous to a polarizing filter, and the sheet is analogous to the plane in which the electric field is oscillating. A polarizing filter is made of a material with long molecules that allow electromagnetic waves of one orientation through. If a wave has an electric field with any other orientation, the filter will only allow a component to pass through, absorbing the rest. Note that only transverse waves such as light can be polarized. Much of the light we see is at least partially polarized. For example, when light reflects off of surfaces it is partially polarized. Some sunglasses contain polarizing filters which helps to block glare (such as the glare that is noticeable when looking out over a lake on a sunny day). Coherent Light Lamps, flashlights, etc… all produce light. But this light is released in many directions, and the light is very weak and diffuse. In coherent light the wavelength and frequency of the photons emitted are the same. The amplitude may vary. Such things as lasers and holograms are composed of coherent light. Incoherent Coherent Lasers Laser stands for light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation. A laser is a device that creates and amplifies a narrow, intense beam of coherent, monochromatic (one wavelength) light. Here’s how they work. There are 2 primary states for an atom, an excited state and a ground state. The ground state is the lowest energy, most stable state. In the excited state electrons are in a higher energy level. In a laser, the atoms or molecules of a crystal (such as ruby) or of a gas, liquid, or other substance are excited in the laser cavity so that more of them are at higher energy levels (excited state) than are at lower energy levels. When an excited electron drops back to a lower energy level, a photon of a particular wavelength is released. This photon stimulates other electrons to emit photons. All these photons are in phase. Holograms As with any type of wave, light waves can interfere with one another. The interference of two or more waves will carry the whole information about all the waves. It is on this basis that holograms work. Holograms make use of lasers and they work in the following fashion: (Explanation on next slide.) Beam Splitter Laser Reference Beam Mirror Object Beam Beam Spreader Light wave interference Film Plate Object Holograms (cont.) As the laser hits the beam splitter, it is split in two. The object beam heads towards the object of interest, while the reference beam heads toward a mirror. The beams are identical until the object beam shines on the object. There some of the light is absorbed; some is reflected toward the film. After reflecting off the mirror, the reference beam is reunited with the object beam on the film. Because one beam interacted with the object and the other didn’t, the two beams will be out of phase and interfere with one another. This interference pattern is imprinted upon the holographic film plate, creating the holographic image. This pattern records the intensity distribution of the reflected light just as an ordinary camera does. However, it also records the phase distribution. This means that it contains information about where the waves are in their oscillating cycles as they strike the film. To determine this the object beam must be compared with the reference beam. This is accomplished via the interference. Also unlike an ordinary photo, a hologram contains all its information in every piece of it. When viewed in coherent light the object appears in 3-D and viewing a hologram from different angles will reveal the object from different angles. Science History • Before Galileo’s time (around 1600), many people believe that light was infinitely fast. It’s so fast that it seemed like it took no time to get from one place to another. Galileo and an assistant went to the Italian countryside, a mile apart, and tried to measure the speed of light by timing it. All they could determine was that light is much faster than sound. • Later that century (around 1667) a Danish astronomer named Ole Roemer made the first accurate measurement of the speed of light. He had been observing one of Jupiter’s moons, Io (which Galileo had discovered). As Io circled Jupiter, it would be eclipsed by Jupiter periodically. That is, Jupiter would block Io’s view from Earth at regular intervals. Each time Io orbited Jupiter, an eclipse would occur. The time between the eclipses was the period of Io’s orbit. Roemer noticed that the eclipses sometimes took a little longer, and sometimes they took a little less time. Io’s period seemed to fluctuate: first Io would be behind schedule; then it would be ahead of schedule. This pattern repeated itself every year, which hinted to Roemer that the fluctuation had to do with Earth’s motion around the sun. Historical Background (cont.) Because Jupiter is farther from the sun, it moves much slower around the sun (recall Kepler’s third law). During the six-month period depicted above, Earth is moving away from Jupiter. Therefore, the light carrying the information of the eclipse took a little longer to reach Earth, since Earth was “running away” from that light. At the end of the six months, the light from Io had to travel an extra distance about equal to the diameter of Earth’s orbit. Roemer’s observed that Io eclipses were about 8 minutes behind schedule after six months. Knowing approximately Earth’s orbital diameter, Roemer calculated the speed of light at around 125,000 miles per second! Roemer’s speed, as great as it was, was actually an underestimate. The true speed of light is just a half a smidgeon under 3 · 108 m/s, which is about 186,300 miles per second! We call this speed c. c = 2.9979 108 m/s 3 108 m/s Historical Background (cont.) • Roemer’s main contribution was proving that the speed of light is finite. Since Roemer, several people contributed to determining the precise value for c. In 1849 Louis Fizeau found an excellent approximation for c without resorting to astronomical means. He used a rapidly rotating, toothed wheel. He shined a beam of light through one opening between the teeth, which reflected off a mirror over 5 miles away. When the wheel spun fairly slowly, the light could easily pass through the opening, reflect, and pass through it again in the other direction before its path was blocked by the next tooth of the wheel. By making the wheel spin faster and faster until the reflected beam of light was blocked, Fizeau was able to calculate c. • Jean-Bernard Foucault also made accurate measurements of c. He shined light at a rotating mirror, which reflected to a stationary mirror, back to the rotating mirror, and finally back toward the source. Because the rotating mirror turned slightly while the light was traveling to the stationary mirror and back, the rotating mirror reflected the light at a slight angle. This angle allowed him to calculate c. Michelson-Morely Experiment Albert Michelson is best known for an experiment he did with Edward Morely in 1887. At the time it wasn’t understood that light needed no medium through which to travel. It was proposed that light traveled through an invisible “ether” in space. The Michelson-Morely experiment was an attempt to detect Earth’s motion through the ether. Here’s how it worked: First imagine you’re standing still outside and there is a wind coming from the north. If you run north, you’ll measure a greater wind speed. If you run south, you’ll measure it slower. Whether you run north or south, though, you’ll still feel the wind coming from the north. If you run east or west, however, not only will the wind seem to change speed, so will its direction. Now imagine a race between two equally fast swimmers. They each go the same distance in a river, but one goes upstream and back while the other goes directly across the river and back. With no current the race would definitely be a tie, since their speeds and distances are the same. With a current, however, the cross-stream swimmer will win. This is not obvious. You should try to prove this. For a hint see the “river crossing--relative velocities” slide from the presentation on vectors. It involves the same principle as Michelson’s interferometer (but without lasers). Michelson-Morely Experiment Michelson-Morely Experiment (cont.) Michelson built something called an interferometer to try to measure a change in the speed of light in two different directions. The Earth moving through the ether around the sun is analogous to a wind or current. Instead of racing two swimmers, Michelson raced beams of light. Light was shone onto a mirror that allowed half of it to pass through. Each beam traveled the same distance before being reflected back and allowed to recombine. Based on the interference pattern of the combined waves, Michelson should have been able to detect a winner. But no matter how the experiment was done, the race was always a tie. This eventually forced physicist to abandon the ether theory. Einstein resolved the problem in 1905 with his theory of special relativity. In it he asserts that the speed of light is the same no matter how fast or which way an observer is moving. Michelson Einstein