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Electromagnetic Radiation Chapter22 Electromagnetic Radiation • Traveling oscillation of the electromagnetic field Electromagnetic Radiation • Includes all waves that travel at the speed of light: Electromagnetic Spectrum • Gamma Rays – highest energy • Ultraviolet light (UV) – mostly blocked by the atmosphere (sunburn) • Visible light – ROYGBIV • Infrared (IR) – thermal imaging • Microwaves – texting • Radio – communication with man-made satellites Uses of EM in our world • What do a PET scanner, a mobile phone, ear thermometer and a microwave oven have in common? • PET is gamma rays, thermometer is IR, oven and mobile phone are microwaves. Fiber Optics • Utilize IR and visible light which can travel faster • Focuses on the particle component of light (photon) • Light enters the optical fiber and utilizes total internal reflection to be able to reach the far end of the tube Visible Light (white light) • Red • Orange • Yellow • Green • Blue • Violet Longest wavelength, lowest frequency and lowest energy Shortest wavelength, higher frequency and highest energy Dispersion • Separating light into its wavelength • White light is separated into the colors of visible light. How is a Rainbow formed? • Water droplets act like prisms and disperse the white light • Different colors come from different water droplets • Red light is not bent as much, so it is on top of a rainbow. Why is the sky blue? • Blue light gets scattered more frequently than the other colors because the wavelength is shorter • Air molecules in the atmosphere scatter the high frequency light waves which are violet and blue • We see blue because our eyes are more sensitive to blue Why are sunsets red? • Air molecules in atmospheric scatter blue, so mainly RED frequencies make it through • At dawn and sunset, the sunlight must go through more atmosphere, so the red end which has longer wavelengths can reach us. • So we see red at sunrise and sunset Why are the clouds white? • Clouds are made of different size water droplets, so all frequencies of light get scattered equally making the clouds appear white. Why is the ocean blue/green? • Water absorbs red, orange and yellow and turns them into heat leaving only green and blue to be reflected • So the ocean looks cyan or blue/green Different Ways of Seeing Color Color by Reflection Color by Transmission Color by Addition Color by Subtraction Color by Reflection • Pigments – Absorb some wavelengths of light and reflect others Color by Transmission • White reflects all wavelengths • Black absorbs all wavelengths • The color of the object depends on the color of light it transmits. Seeing Color • The color an object appears depends on the colors of light it reflects. For example, a red book only reflects red light: Only red light is reflected Color by Addition • Adding the wavelengths of light • Additive primary colors: red, green and blue • Color TV is based on seeing these 3 colors and the combination of them Color by Subtraction • Mixing colored pigments (used in paint) • Used in printing illustrations • 3 paint or dye colors used: magenta (bluish red), yellow and cyan (greenish blue) Additive and Subtractive