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Projekt z Obrazového inženýrství Téma: Vlastnosti Jméno: Filip Mravec světla a měření rychlosti světla Datum: Předmluva Tato práce je koncipována do dvou myšlenkových okruhů. V prvním jsou velmi zběžně zmíněny vlastnosti elektromagnetického záření a jejich fyzikální popis. Aplikace jednotlivých vlastností byly ponechány pro konkrétní případy využití vlastností světla. V druhé části jde o pohled do historie, přehled a postupy používaných metod stanovení ryclosti světla. Obsah A. Vlastnosti světla A1 Elektromagnetická vlna A2 Difrakce A3 Odraz A4 Lom A5 Inerference A6 Koherence A7 Polarizace B Měření rychlosti světla B1 Historie B2 Michelsonův pokus B3 Moderní metody B4 Myšlenkové experimenty + zařízení B5 Rychlost světla v různých prostředích B6 Tabulka změřených hodnot A1. Elektromagnetická vlna Light Fundamentals Characteristics of light as electromagnetic radiation: 1. it travels through a vacuum 2. its speed in a vacuum is 3 x 108 m/s 3. visible light ranges from 700 nm for red light to 400 nm for violet (blue) light where 1 nanometer = 1 x 10-9 m electromagnetic spectrum written in order of decreasing wavelength and increasing frequency radio & TV , microwave, IR (infrared, or light with wavelength greater than 700 nm), visible light (light with wavelengths between 400 and 700 nm), UV (ultraviolet, or light with wavelength shorter than 400 nm), X-ray, gamma o colors of visible light: red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet Theories of light: 1. Newton's corpuscular theory: Newton predicted that light behaved like a particle, called a corpuscle. Newton's theory supports reflection. 2. Wave theory (Maxwell): light is an electromagnetic wave. The wave theory supports reflection, refraction, interference, and diffraction. Proof that light has a wave nature -only a wave can interfere and diffract. Modern theory: dual nature of light. Light acts like a particle when it transfers or absorbs energy; light acts like a wave when it moves through space. Einstein described the particle nature of light. In his equation, E = hf, he describes the energy E of a particle and the corresponding frequency f of the wave. Proof that light has a particle nature -- photoelectric effect, Compton effect, pair production, and emission spectra. Maxwell's Equations Maxwell showed that light is a traveling configuation of electric and magnetic fields. He formulated differential equations that proved that electromagntic fields spread in the form of polarized waves and at the speed of light. The speed of light is related to purely electric and magnetic quantities. Where µo and εo are the permeability of free space(µo = 4π x 10-7 T m/A) and permittivity of free space (εo = 8.85 x 10-12 C2/N m2) What is Light? Light is a form of energy produced by the change in motion of a charged particle. Light does not need a medium (solid, liquid or gas) in order to travel. Electrons moving back and forth will cause light. When the electrons inside of an atom absorb energy they jump to a different energy level. When these electrons fall back down to their original energy level they give off a little packet of energy in the form of light. This packet of light energy is called a photon. Light can either travel as a wave or as a particle. We will be studying how light behaves as a transverse wave. Some objects produce their own light will other objects reflect light. These sources of light are called luminated objects. Sources of light include: the sun, a light bulb, a match and a candle. Bioluminescent organisms are living things that can produce their own light. A firefly is an example of a bioluminescent organism. Objects that reflect certain amounts of light are called illuminated objects. Objects that reflect light include: a mirror, the moon and a piece of paper. What is so amazing about light is the speed at which it travels. Light travels 186,000miles per second or 299,798 kilometers per second. That means light can travel a distance of 186,000 miles in one second! It takes eight minutes for light from the sun to reach earth. This is why you hear lightening before you see thunder. Lightening and thunder happen at the same time, yet light travels faster than sound so you see the lightening then a few seconds later you hear the thunder. Jednotlivé oblasti elektromagnetického spekta: Gamma Rays Gamma rays have the smallest wavelength and the most energy out of the entire electromagnetic spectrum. These rays are very powerfull and can kill living tissue. Gamma rays are used in therapy to kill cancer cells. X-Rays If you have ever broken a bone you have had an x-ray done to see what the break looks like. Can you make out the image to the left? It is a left hand with a ring on the finger. An X-ray camera works like any other camera except it gives off invisible energy rays called X-rays. These X-rays travel through your skin. An X-ray camera won't work unless it finds something hard to stop the rays. The X-rays bounce off of your bone and back to the camera. The x-ray picks up the dense parts of the bone. The denser the bone, the more rays that were bounced back, the lighter the bone appears on the "film." (The picture to the left is reversed.) Ultraviolet Rays These rays are responsible for giving us a tan or a sunburn when we sit outside. Long time exposure to these rays can cause skin cancer. This is the only portion of the visible spectrum that you are able to see. The colors of the spectrum include: Red Orange Yellow Green Blue Indigo Violet. Red having the least amount of energy and the longest wavelength and violet having the most energy and the shortest wavelength. All the colors you see are from this little portion of the electromagnetic spectrum. Radio Waves When you listen to the radio or watch T.V. you are using a part of the electromagnetic spectrum with lowest energy and a long wavelength. When you turn the dial on your radio you are adjusting to the same frequency as the radio station. Radio stations are either amplitude modulation (AM) or frequency modulation (FM). Your favorite T.V. shows use a combination of both, AM for the sound and FM for the picture. Microwaves These waves carry more energy than radio waves. These waves are responsible for heating your food. They are also responsible for communications (satellites, cell phones etc…) and radar. Infrared Waves This is an image of the infrared waves felt as heat from a human body. These waves are heat waves. You can feel the warmth from the sun as infrared waves. Restaurants use infrared waves to keep food warm after it has been cooked. These waves have a higher frequency and shorter wavelength than microwaves. These waves are called infrared because they have a frequency slightly longer than that of visible light. Light terms: transparent transmits light readily translucent transmits light with distortion opaque doesn’t transmit light (it is absorbed or reflected) spectrum band of colors produced when light is broken into its constituent wavelengths dispersion scattering of light. A prism will separate whitle light into a rainbow of colors. When incident upon a prism, the wavelengths of light are bent (or refracted) to varying degrees. Violet light is bent them most and red light is bent the least. Rainbows are an example of dispersion produced by drops of water. • • • • • color the color of an opaque object is due to the color that it reflects. A black object absorbs all color and a white object reflects all color. The color of a transparent object is due to the combining of transmitted light colors. Primary colors of transmitted light red, green, and blue combine to form white light Secondary colors produced by combining two primary colors yellow, cyan, and magenta Complementary colors produced by combining a primary color and a secondary color to form white light An applet that allows you to mix colors and pigments. Color The colors of a thin film result from the interference of light reflected from the front and the back surfaces of the thin film. When the film thickness equals Ľ λ, that color of light will be constructively interfered with as it reflects from the two surfaces of the film. All others will be destructively interfered with. Polarized light waves are either vertical or horizontal. They are produced by passing light through a polarizer. • Polarizer produces polarized light by allowing only vertical or horizontal light waves through. Analyzer polarizer whose orientation differs by 90 degrees; when a polarizer and analyzer are used, no polarized light will be transmitted. The analyzer absorbs polarized light. Light as wave If we think of this figure as representing the electrical energy present in the light waveform as it travels in the direction of the arrow, it looks as if the energy level is becoming alternately positive and negative, with momentary crossovers of zero electrical energy. In the basic model of light shown here, this is in fact the case; as with all electromagnetic waves, light energy is constantly changing its form between electrical energy and magnetic energy. The point of maximum magnetic energy coincides with the moment of zero electrical energy. Beyond that instant, energy shifts again from the magnetic field back into the electrical field, but with a reversal from the previous polarity. This continues as long as that particular ray of light exists. There are other "modes" of propogation which involve more complex interactions between the electric and magnetic fields, but in all cases the Law of Conservation necessarily holds true: Energy is neither created nor destroyed as it is transformed from one form to another; the total energy in the wave must somehow remain constant throughout the full cycle. NOTE: The sine wave shown here represents the strength and polarity of the electrical field associated with the motion of this ray of light. The light itself, assuming no outside influences, travels in the straight line indicated by the blue arrow. The light energy does not "wiggle" back and forth as it moves along its path. As an electromagnetic wave, light has some characteristics in common with all forms of electromagnetic energy. These include wavelength, frequency, and speed of propogation. These characteristics are actually related to each other, so that any one can be calculated if the other two are known. Let's take a look at each of these characteristics: wavelength Since light is a repeating waveform in motion, it is possible to measure the physical distance between matching points of adjacent cycles of the waveform. This is shown here: The symbol used to represent this distance is the Greek letter "Lambda" λ The wavelength can actually be measured between any two corresponding points on the waveform. It is convenient to use the most positive point or the most negative point, both of which are shown above. However, we could have just as easily specified two zero-crossing points, so long as both crossed the zero line in the same direction. Remember that the light itself does not wave back and forth along its path of travel. What we are actually measuring here is the distance traveled through space by this ray of light, while its electrical field goes from its maximum positive value, through zero to its maximum negative value, and then through zero again to once more reach its maximum positive value. This distance is normally measured in meters (m) or some decimal fraction of a meter, such as centimeters (cm). The correct units of measurement are meters per cycle (m/cycle) or some appropriate derivation. In the case of light, the wavelength is so short that a specific distance, called the ångstrom (Å), has been defined. One ångstrom = 10-10 m or 10-8 cm. Visible light has a characteristic wavelength in the range of approximately 3900 Å to 7700 Å. Electromagnetic energy outside this range is no longer visible to the human eye. Speed of Propogation The speed at which light travels through any medium is determined by the density of that medium. The presence of matter, even transparent matter, will slow the light down. Even air will have some effect, and glass has a more significant effect on the speed at which light will travel through it. Ever more sophisticated experiments have determined the speed of light quite accurately. According to current knowledge: Speed of light in a vacuum = 2.997925 ± 0.000002 x 1010 cm/sec. As made famous in Einstein's equation, the letter c is used as a general symbol for the speed of light. Frequency and Period In any electromagnetic wave, it takes time for the energy in the wave to change from electrical format to magnetic and then back again. The amount of time required to do this twice, covering one complete cycle, or wavelength of the signal is known as the period of the wave. Thus, the period of any wave, measured as some amount of time per cycle, is in fact the time interval that corresponds to the physical wavelength of the signal. The frequency of the wave is the inverse or reciprocal of the period. That is, the frequency is the number of cycles of the waveform that occur in one second of time. For many years this was simply measured in units of cycles per second. Recently, however, the specific name hertz (abbreviated Hz) has now been designated as the appropriate unit to indicate cycles per second. In general equations, the letter f is used to indicate frequency in hertz. c = fЋ Obecné vlastnosti elektromagnetické vlny 1) 2) 3) 4) Elektrické pole E i magnetické pole B je vždy kolmé na směr šíření vlny Elektrické pole je vždy kolmé k magnetickému. Vektorový součin E X B udává směr šíření vlny Je-li vlna harmonická, mají pole E i B stejnou frekvenci a jsou ve fázi. Zápis polí jako sinusové funkce polohy x a času t E = Emax.sin.(kx – ωt) B = Bmax.sin.(kx – ωt) Emax a Bmax jsou amplitudy polí; k úhlový vlnočet; ω úhlová frekvence vlny A platí E/B = c A.2 Difrakce: Diffraction of light happens when light bends around a barrier. Light travels in straight lines with little room to bend. That is why we have shadows, light does not bend as easily as sound. The longer the wavelength of light the easier it will diffract. Radio waves are the longest so they will bend the most. Gamma rays are the shortest, they will bend the least. Visible light will diffract a little bit. Diffraction is used experimentally to determine the wavelength of light: n λ = d sin θ Double Slit Diffraction In 1801, Thomas Young experimentally determined the wavelengths of visible light, obtaining experimental proof for the wave nature of light. In his experiment, light from a single source falls on two closely spaced slits. If light behaved as a particle, we would expect to see two spots on a screen. Instead, Young saw a series of bright lines which he explained as a wave-interference phenomenon. When the light falls on the two slits, it diffracts, spreading out. The diffracted waves from each slit constructively and destructively interfere. If the waves from the two slits travel the same distance, they are in phase, and produce a bright spot in the center of the screen. Constructive interference also occurs when one wave travels an extra distance that is a whole number multiple of a wavelength of the wave, producing bright lines on the screen. Destructive interference occurs when one wave travels a distance of one-half wavelength (or 3/2, 5/2, etc.) more than the other, producing dark lines on the screen. One sees a bright central spot on the screen, with alternating dark and bright lines (or fringes) on either side. In his 1704 treatise on the theory of optical phenomena (Opticks), Sir Isaac Newton wrote that "Light is never known to follow crooked passages nor to bend into the shadow". He explained this observation by describing how particles of light always travel in straight lines, and how objects positioned within the path of light particles would cast a shadow because the particles could not spread out behind the object. On a large scale, this hypothesis is supported by the seemingly sharp edges of shadows cast by rays from the sun. However, on a much smaller scale, when light waves pass near a barrier, they tend to bend around that barrier and spread at oblique angles. This phenomenon is known as diffraction of the light, and occurs when a light wave passes very close to the edge of an object or through a tiny opening such as a slit or aperture. xxxxxxxxxx Difrakci lze vysvětlit vlnovou teorií sětla vytvořenou Christianem Huygensem. Byla však v rozporu s Newtonovským pojímáním světla, jako proudu částic. Prosadit vlnovou podstatu difrakce se podařilo až Augustinu Fresnelovi. Optické difrakční jevy dělíme na Fresnelovu difrakci (intenzita jako funkce polohy v nějaké rovině pozorování umístěné v konečné vzdálenosti za difrakčním stínítkem) a Fraunhoferova difrakce(intenzita jako funkce polohy v nějaké rovině pozorování umístěné v nekonečné vzdálenosti za difrakčním stínítkem). A.3 Odraz: Reflection is the bouncing back of a wave. As we see in the diagram to the left. Light waves hit a smooth surface and bounce off with the same angle in which they hit the surface. This is the Law of Reflection: the angle of incidence is equal to the angel of reflection. Since both angles are equal the image appears to be the same. This will happen when we reflect light off of a flat smooth surface. What happens when the surface is not smooth? When light bounces off of a rough surface difuse reflection is seen. Objects appear blurred, like the reflection of the setting sun on the water. We do not get a clear picture of the sun as we would if the light was being reflected off of a mirror. Surfaces can also be curved. A satilite dish is a perfect example of a concave surface. The dish is curved inward as to direct all of the light waves in toward the center receiver and then through a cable into your house. *** So that we can agree fully on what we are talking about, we need to define a few terms: Incident Light Light approaching a surface is known as incident light. TWhen light reflects off a surface, it follows some rather basic rules which have been gradually determined by observation. Consider the animation to the left. A ray of light approaches a reflecting horizontal surface at an angle of 45°, bounces from the surface, and leaves at an angle of 45°. his is the incoming light before it has reached the surface. Reflected Light After light has struck a surface and bounced off, it is known as reflected light. This is the light that is now departing from the surface. Angle of Incidence The angle at which a ray of light approaches a surface, reflective or not, is called the angle of incidence. It is measured from an imaginary line perpendicular to the plane of the surface in question to the incoming ray of light. Angle of Reflection Once the light has reflected from a reflective surface, the angle at which the light departs from the surface is called the angle of reflection. This angle is also measured from a perpendicular to the reflecting surface to the departing ray of light. When light reflects from a surface, the angle of reflection is always equal to the angle of incidence. When multiple rays of light approach a reflecting surface, each individual ray behaves independently of all the others. If all three angles of incidence are the same and the surface of reflection is perfectly flat as shown, all three angles of reflection will also be the same. A.4 Lom: (refraction) Refraction is the name given to the observed phenomenon that light changes direction, or "bends," as it passes the boundary between one medium and another. This is shown to the right, in a general sense. Here, we see a beam of light traveling through air, until it meets a pool of water. It arrives at some angle to the surface as shown. As it passes through the boundary, going from air into water, it actually slows down. Since even a single ray of light has a finite thickness, the part that enters the water first slows down first, causing the light ray to change direction to a steeper angle in the water. If we change the angle at which the light enters the water, we find that the angle of the light in the water also changes, such that we see no change at all if the light source is directly overhead so that the entering ray of light is perpendicular to (in mathematical terms normal to) the surface. As we change the entering angle more and more away from the perpendicular, we see that the ray of light in the water has bent more and more away from the direction taken by that ray of light in the air. The basic Law of Refraction was first formulated by Willebrord Snell in 1621. Consider the diagram to the left. We see here two parallel rays of light in red. They are passing through a boundary between air and water at a measurable angle of incidence,Θr. The rays of light in the water remain parallel, and are now leaving the boundary at a measurable angle of refraction, Θr. When light changes speed and direction as it moves from one medium to the next, light is said to refract. You can try this cute experiment to see how light refracts. Below is a picture of marbles placed over a checkered background. Notice how the squares are a different size when you look through the glass of the marble. If you wear glasses you are refracting light. The glasses have lenses to bend light on to your retina. There are two types of lenses as shown in the diagrams below. Concave is like a cave and goes inward while convex curves outward. Refraction index of any material depends upon the wavelength of the light. This fact can be used to resolve the light beam into the spectral components it consists of. One of the tools used for spectrum analysis of light is the glass prism. Let us consider and beam of the light propagating symmetrically to prism (see the figure). If α is the refractive angle of the prism, then we can find from the condition n = sin ξ0 / sin ξ = sin ζ / sin ζ0 that n = sin (α/2 + ϕ/2) / sin ( α/2 ) (1) In practice the refraction index n depends upon the light wavelength λ , so the angle ϕ at which the prism refracts the light will depend upon the light wavelength too: D = dϕ / dλ = (dϕ / dn)(dn / dλ ) Vlnová délka a index lomu (2) Vlnová délka světla v prostředí závisí na jeho indexu lomu. λn = λ / n Fázový rozdíl se tedy může měnit, jestliže vlny procházejí různými látkami s různým indexem lomu. A. 5 Intererence: Light interfernce is easy to see. When you look at the demonstration of diffraction above you will see interfence patterns. Light wave interference happens when the light wave come in contact with one another. Constructive interference produces a more intense band of light while destructive interference produces a less intense band of light or no light at all. Interference is caused by waves overlapping with each other, causing a cancellation of the wave at that point, or an amplification of the wave at that point. Pozn.: Mýdlová bublina nebo olejová skvrna vytvářejí jasné barvy konstruktivní a destruktivní interferencí světla, na rozdíl od lomu světla na kapkách vody tvořících duhu. A. 6 Koherence: Nutnou podmínkou, aby se interferenční obrazec objevil na stínítku je,aby se ázový rozdíl vln dopadající do libovolného bodu s časem neměnil. Takové světlo se nazývá koherentní (dokolnale). Příkladem dokonale koherentního sětelného zdroje je laser. A.7 Polarizace: Polarized Light Maxwell's theory of light predicts that light can be polarized since it is a transverse wave. The direction of polarization is taken as the direction of the electric field vector. Polarized light is said to be plane-polarized, or the oscillations are in a plane. In unpolarized light, the electric field vectors vibrate at all angles. A polarizer produces plane-polarized light by transmitting only the component of light parallel to the axis. An analyzer determines if the light is polarized and what is the plane of polarization. Light can also be partially polarized by reflection. If light traveling in air is reflected from a medium with index of refraction of n, the incident beam is completely polarized if the incident beam's angle is given by tanθ = n. An applet that allows you to create polarized light. B) Rychlost světla: B.1 HISTORIE About 1675, Ole Roemer, a Dutch astronomer, computed tables to show the times of future eclipses of Jupiter's satellites, such as may be found today in the "Astronomical Almanac." He observed the phenomena from time to time and was astonished to find variations and that at the end of six months some of the observed times were over 16 mins behind the predicted times. Continuing to observe and time, he found that there was a certain regularity in the discrepancies. When the Earth was at its closest to Jupiter, the eclipses occurred on time, but when the two planets were at their farthest distance apart, the eclipses were late. He deduced that the discrepancy must be due to the difference in the distance that light had to travel. Calculation showed that light must take one second to travel 186,000 miles. Now then, is it possible to measure the velocity of light without resort to astronomical means? The answer is yes. Nowadays there are many approaches but, between 1878 and 1882, Albert A. Michelson, an American naval officer constructed an apparatus to do just that. ******* Galileo's attempt Galileo used lanterns between two hilltops. Saw essentially no travel time. If the distance were, say 2 miles, then the sound distance would be about 10 seconds. He had no reason to believe that the velocity of light was significantly faster than that of sound. Astronomical measurements In 1676 Rømer made careful measurements of the times at which satellites of Jupiter were eclipsed by the planet. The times observed did not agree with those calculated on the assumptions of a constant period of rotation and of instantaneous transmission of light. Starting at a time when the Earth was at its nearest to Jupiter, the apparent period increased and the eclipses became increasingly later than the calculated times as the Earth receded from Jupiter. Similarly, the period shortened when the Earth was moving toward Jupiter. The observed times were consistent with a finite velocity of light such that the time for it to transverse the Earth's orbit is about 1,000 seconds. Taken with modern values of the size of the Earth's orbit, the derived value of the velocity is 298,000 kilometres per second. It is remarkable that this first measurement was even of the correct order; the most important conclusion was that the velocity of light is finite. An English astronomer, James Bradley (died 1762), obtained a similar value by the so-called aberration method, based on the apparent motion of stars as the Earth travels in its orbit about the Sun. Early terrestrial experiments In terrestrial experiments by method (1), the beam of light is periodically marked either by interrupting it at regular intervals or by modulating it (alternately increasing and decreasing its intensity). The marked beam is transmitted to a distant mirror and the return beam passes through the apparatus that interrupts or modulates the outgoing beam and then to a detector. If the time required for transmission to the distant mirror and return is 1/2, 3/2, 5/2, . . . times the period of the interrupter (or modulator), then the amount that reaches the detector is small. It is usual to adjust either the path length or the period of the interrupter or modulator until the light registered by the detector is a minimum. In the earlier experiments, a mechanical chopper was used as interrupter, and the eye was the detector. Later experimenters used electronic modulators and photoelectric detectors. The apparatus used by Fizeau in 1849 is shown in Figure 6, in which M1 is a partially reflecting mirror and M2 is a fully silvered mirror. As the speed of the wheel (which has 720 teeth) was increased from zero, it was found that the light was first eclipsed by a tooth when the speed was about 12.6 revolutions per second--i.e., when the time to make the round trip was 560 microseconds (0.00056 second), the length of the double path being 17.3 kilometres (about 10 miles). The chief error in the measurement lay in the difficulty of determining the exact speeds at which the light received by the eye at E was at a minimum. Essentially the same method was used by others between 1874 and 1903. The accuracy gradually improved, and it was shown that the velocity is between 299,000 and 301,000 kilometres per second. In 1834 Sir Charles Wheatstone of England suggested a method incorporating a rotating mirror for interrupting the light that was later developed by Arago (1838) and Foucault (1850). It was considerably improved by Michelson, who made measurements from 1879 to 1935. B.2 Michelsonův pokus He arranged for a beam of light to be brought to a focus and passed through a slit (A) on to a revolving mirror (B1). From here it was reflected by stationary mirrors (C and D) to a concave mirror (E). From this point the beam was directed across country where, 22 miles distant, was another concave mirror (F) that reflected (G) the beam back to the first concave mirror (H). Here, by means of other mirrors (I and J), the beam was directed to a mirror (K5) on a revolving drum and then by another stationary mirror to a small telescope. Adjustments were made so that the observer saw the original slit as a bright line on a graduated scale marked in the eyepiece of the telescope. The revolving mirrors were driven at high speed by suitable gearing from an electric motor, and as they rotated they reflected the light as an intermittent beam along its 44 mile path, "out and home." It is easy to understand that when the original beam from the mirror at (B) is returned to (K), if the mirrors are revolving, it will not find the individual mirrors in the same position as they were when the beam commenced its journey. As the revolving mirrors have moved, the beam will be sent slightly to one side of the telescope slit, so that nothing will be seen. By speeding up the rotating mirrors, however, a point will be reached when the beam will impinge on mirror B1, travel the 44 miles, and find that in the meantime the mirror has made 1/8 of a revolution allowing mirror 4 exactly to take the place of mirror 5. When the mirror velocity has been so adjusted that this happens, the light will be seen in the telescope.The measurement of the elapsed time for the displacement of mirror 4 to position 5 enables the further calculation of the distance that light travels in one second and gives our, now well understood, figure of (about) 300,000 kms per second. (299,792.5 ??) další zdroj pro Michelsonův experiment Figure 7 shows the arrangement used in 1927. The mirror M3 is a little above the plane of the diagram, and M3' is a little below. Light from the source S passes to one face of the octagonal mirror M1 and then to M2, M3, and M4. From M4 it goes to the mirror M5 at a distance of about 35 kilometres (about 22 miles). It returns via M6, M4, M3', and M' to the octagon. An image of S is seen in an eyepiece at E. The octagonal mirror rotated at 528 revolutions per second. It turned through approximately one-eighth of a revolution during the transit of the light. If the rotation were exactly one-eighth of a revolution, the image would be undisplaced from the position it had when the mirrors were stationary. In some of Michelson's experiments, the speed of rotation was slowly changed until this condition was obtained. In others, the speed and distance were fixed, and a small displacement of the image was measured. B.3 Moderní principy The electro-optical shutter This device, based on the Kerr effect, makes it possible to modulate a beam of light at frequencies more than 10,000 times the highest frequency of interruption used by Michelson and obtain values in reasonably good agreement with each other and with Michelson's later work. This method was greatly improved by E. Bergstrand in Sweden, who reduced the random errors by a factor of more than 30 and obtained a value for the velocity of light of 299,793.1 kilometres per second. Radio-frequency measurements The velocity of electromagnetic waves of radio frequency in vacuum has been measured by several methods. An English physicist, Louis Essen, measured (1950) the resonance frequency of a cavity resonator (an electromagnetic device) whose dimensions were also determined with high accuracy. Keith Davy Froome, a physicist in England, measured (1952 and 1958) the wavelength in air, corresponding to a known frequency, using a microwave interferometer. The results of these and other measurements are in agreement with those of Bergstrand to within a few parts per million. The velocity of radio waves in vacuum is thus equal, within this accuracy, to the velocity of light. The velocity of gamma rays is also the same, within the much lower accuracy of this last measurement. Table 1 summarizes the measurements of the velocity constant (c) and shows that there is now satisfactory agreement between results obtained over a wide range of conditions. Since the publication of the special theory of relativity (1905), the constant c has been recognized as one of the fundamental constants of modern physics. For this reason, attempts will undoubtedly be made to measure it with even greater precision. The use of lasers may help, but a major improvement will require the establishment of better standards of length and time than those now available. Modifikovaný školní experiment The aim of this experiment is to measure the speed of light in an experiment available to do at school. The principle is quite simple. Let a ray of light strike a rotating mirror that reflects the light three meters away to a second mirror, so that the light is reflected back at the rotating mirror and back to the laser. The rotating mirror has during the time it took for the light to travel the six meters to the second mirror and back rotated some degrees and the light spot has moved from the origin. And if you know how fast the mirror is rotating, you can calculate how fast the light is traveling. The apparatus is set up like the figure below shows. When we did the experiment and measured, x was measured to approximately 3.0 mm - 3.5 mm. So we know that the velocity of light is the distance it travels divided by the time it takes ( c = d / t ), and the distance is 30 meters since the light should travel to the second mirror and back. The how do we know how long time it takes? Well, if we use a tuning fork we can set the mirror to do 512 rotations per second. And since we know the distance between the rotating mirror and the laser, and the angular velocity of the rotating mirror, we can calculate how long time it takes. So q = x / 10 = 3 E-4T = 1 / 512 " 0.001953 t = q / 2p * T = ( 0.3E-4 m / 2p ) * ( 1 / 512 ) = 9.32E-8 Then, c = d / t = 30 / 9.32E-8 " 321719678 m/s " 322 000 km/s When we are measuring these small distances with a ruler, and using such high velocities as the speed of light, it is very hard to be precise and the result may vary quite much. According to the book the velocity of light is 299,792,458 m/s, so it wasn't that bad measured, but on the other hand, the difference is approximately 22,000km/s which is a very high velocity. B.4 Myšlenkové experimenty + zařízení Velocity of Light 11224.93 Velocity of Light Apparatus • Accurate and dependable results • Rapid and simple student set-up • Measures velocity in air or liquids • No mechanical moving parts The beam from a 50 MHz modulated LED is directed to a receiving diode through an optical path that is reversed by a pair of mirrors which can be moved to change the path length. The modulated received signal is phase shifted relative to the original signal as a function of the length of the light path. The phase relation is represented as a Lissajous figure on a twochannel oscilloscope. Both the emitted and the received signals are frequency shifted with a 1:1000 reduction, so that simple oscilloscopes and frequency counters having 1 MHz bandpass can be used. Receiving and emitting diodes are installed and aligned in the chassis. The apparatus has a measuring path of 1.5 m. With the assistance of a phase shifter, a defined phase relation (e.g. a Lissajous straight line) can be adjusted for a position of the mirror directly in front of the emitter receiver unit. ****** This is a thought experiment to show how two different observers might measure the speed of light along a single path if they could get a cylinder to rotate at 107 revolutions per second. In figure 1 observer A has a hollow cylinder 3 meters long and not moving relative to the light source. Both ends are closed. In the top is a small hole near the circumference. In the bottom is a similar hole offset from the top hole by 36o or 1/10 the distance around the bottom. Light enters the top and travels the length of the cylinder. If the cylinder were rotating at 1.0 x 107 revolutions per second then the hole in the bottom and the light will arrive at the at the same point at the same time and the light will exit the cylinder. The light exits the bottom hole and traces a circle of light on a flat screen below the cylinder. The time for the light to travel 3 meters is 10-8 second. The number of revolutions in that amount of time is 1.0 x 107 x10-8 = 0.1 revolution or 36o. If the cylinder were rotating at any other velocity the bottom hole and the light would not coincide and the light would not exit the cylinder. ********** In engineering terms the velocity of light in free space c is given by the expression c = 1/(µ0ε0)1/2, where in mks units µ0 = 4π x 10-7 H/m and ε0 = 8.854 x 10-12 F/m, are, respectively, the magnetic permeability and dielectric permittivity of the vacuum. Therefore, the argument that c is fixed is, at base, an argument that µ0 and ε0 are fixed and not subject to manipulation by technological means. B.5 Rychlost světla v různých materiálech Velocity in material mediums All measurements of the velocity of light involve interruption or modulation of a beam of light so as to form groups of waves and the velocity measured is the group velocity. The difference in magnitude between the wave velocity and the group velocity of light in air is only about one part in 50,000, but in most glasses and in some liquids it is much larger. Michelson obtained 1.758 for the ratio of the velocity in air to the velocity in carbon disulfide. The inverse ratio of their indices of refraction is 1.64 and the value calculated from this for the ratio of group velocities is 1.745 for wavelength 580 nanometres, close to Michelson's observations. Bergstrand found that the ratio of the velocity in vacuo to the velocity in a certain glass was 1.550 +/- 0.003. The refractive index of the glass was 1.519, but the ratio of c to the group velocity was 1.547. The experimental results thus agree with thosecalculated on the assumption that the measured velocity is the group velocity. A.6 Tabulka některých dosud změřených hodnot Experimenter Roemer-Chaffin Date c, km/sec 1675 320 000 1675 300 000 1675 292 000 Roemer-Mammel 1675 317 700 Roemer-Setterfield 1675 307 500 Cassini 1693 352 000 Roemer-Goldstein (1) Roemer-Goldstein (2) Value current 20207,54 8500 2 No. obs. Method 50 1 1500 207,542 50 1 50 1 50 1 50 1 50 1 error, ± 7792,458 17907,54 2700 2 5400 7707,542 52207,54 18000 2 5400 Bradley (first 1727 accepted) (KO) Auwers (Kew) 1727 Newcomb 1727 Delambre 1738 (definitive) Bradley (17261740 1754) Auwers (Wanstead) 1727-47 Fizeau (Journal 1849,5 value) Fizeau. (textbook 1849,5 value) Fizeau (often 1855 omitted) Fizeau (bad 1855 citation?) Maxwell 1868 284 000 W.Thomson/King 1869 280 900 Nyren-Wagner 1861-1879 1870 299 980 Cornu (Rejected) 1872 298 500 1000 Nyren (PO) 1873 299 810 200 McKichan 1874 289 700 6800 1874,8 1874,8 1874,8 1876,5 300 400 299 990 299 900 299 921 300 200 200 13 Cornu Cornu-Helmert Cornu-Dorsey Harvard (1844- 303 430 750 3637,542 800 2 301 416 299 289 1070 1623,542 1750 -503,458 800 800 2 2 303 320 65 3527,542 1000 1 300 650 750 857,542 2300 2 300 313 920 520,542 15507,54 10000 2 13507,54 10000 2 700 2 14 3 14 3 5000 5857,542 25 3 25 3 12 7 33 7 950 2 658 3 50 2 33 7 208 208 208 500 3 3 3 1 315 300 313 300 305 650 298 000 1792,458 20000 15792,45 8 8300 18892,45 8 5000 60 187,542 1292,458 17,542 10092,45 8 607,542 197,542 107,542 128,542 1909) Sampson (18441909) Michelson (rejected) Stoletov Newcomb (doubtful av.) Newcomb-Dorsey Exner Newcomb (full approval) Michelson Michelson-Dorsey Nyren (definitive) J.J.Thomson Comstock Blondlot Pellat Doolittle (FO) Internat Lat. Service Perrotin-Prim Perrotin Pease/Pearson Sollenberger (W0) Romanskaya (PO) Rabe, indirect Anderson Anderson-Birge Hüttel Hüttel-Birge Anderson Essen/GordonSmith Essen/GordonSmith Jones Smith, Franklin, Whiting Jones-Cornford Scholdstrom Plyler/Blaine/Conn or Wadley Wadley 1876,5 300 011 13 218,542 500 1 1878 300 140 480 347,542 10 4 1881 299 000 2000 -792,458 33 7 1881,8 299 810 50 17,542 189 4 1881,8 299 780 ? 4 1882 287 000 33 7 1882,7 299 860 66 4 1882,8 1882,8 1883 299 853 299 850 299 850 563 563 2000 4 4 2 1883 296 400 33 7 1890,5 1891 1891 1901,5 300 560 302 200 300 920 299 760 60 60,542 250 57,542 90 57,542 20000 3392,458 170 767,542 8500 2407,542 600 1127,542 130 -32,458 50 12 33 50 2 6 7 2 1901,5 299 660 60 -132,458 50 2 1902,4 1902,4 1932,5 1933 1935 1935,5 1936,8 1936,8 1937 1937 1940 299 901 299 860 299 774 300 420 299 790 299 920 299 771 299 771 299 768 299 771 299 776 84 80 10 60 100 60 10 10 10 10 10 108,542 67,542 -18,458 627,542 -2,458 127,542 -21,458 -21,458 -24,458 -21,458 -16,458 1232 1233 2885 50 14783 50 651 651 135 ? 2895 3 3 5 2 2 2 8 8 8 8 8 1947 299 798 3 5,542 3 9 1947 299 792 3 -0,458 4 9 1947 299 687 25 -105,458 50 10 1947 299 695 50 -97,458 50 10 1949 1955 299 701 299 792,4 25 -91,458 0,4 -0,058 50 50 10 11 1955 299 792,0 6 -0,458 58 13 1956 1956 299 792,9 299 792,7 2 2 40 24 14 14 80 -12,458 23000 12792,45 8 30 67,542 0,442 0,242 Edge Edge Wadley Froome Kolibayev (av. date) Karolus Simkin et al. Grosse Bay/Luther/White NRC/NBS NRC/NBS Evenson et al. Blaney et al. Woods/Shotton/Ro wley Baird/Smith/Whitf ord NBS (U. S.) 1956 1956 1957 1958 299 792,4 299 792,2 299 792,6 299 792,5 0,11 -0,058 0,13 -0,258 1,2 0,142 0,1 0,042 50 50 14 21 11 11 14 12 1960 299 792,6 0,06 0,142 23 11 1966 1967 1967 1972 1972 1973 1973 1974 299 792,44 299 792,56 299 792,5 299 792,462 299 792,460 299 792,458 ######## ######## 0,2 -0,018 0,11 0,102 0,05 0,042 0,018 0,004 0,006 0,002 0,002 0,000 0,0011 -0,001 0,0008 0,001 278 70 50 50 50 50 50 50 15 16 11 17 17 17 17 17 1978 ######## 0,0002 0,001 64 17 1979 ######## 0,0019 0,000 50 17 1983 ######## 50 17 Mean STDEV VAR Unknown Moons of Jupiter Aberration Toothed wheel Rotating mirror Polygonal mirror Waves on wires ESU/EMU Kerr cell Cavity resonator Radar Geodimeter Radio interferometer Spectral lines Tellurometer Modulated light Microwave Laser Quartz Modulator 0,0003 0,001 1390,668 300 288,662 496,20 3 3684,916 5181,28 5181,28 8 1357861 26845703,4 2 558 The Atomic Clock was first used as the standard in 1967. The velocity of light was defined to be a constant in 1983. The value chosen for c was 299,792.458 km/sec. WO Washington Observatory SO Strasburg Observatory GO Greenich Observatory Ho Honolulu Observatory PO Pulkova Observatory BO Berlin Observatory FO Flower Observatory SFO San Francisco Observatory KO Kazin Observatory Type of Data P Primary Data S Secondary Source R Reworking of data for P P* Primary value preferred by authors R* Reworking of data preferred by authors Pulkova Data has been corrected Lg Error Uncertainty in error bars too great to show trend Outlier Data lies well outside nearby data points Reject Value rejected by experimenter or by subsequent analysis C) Zdroje http://www.infoline.ru/g23/5495/Physics/pris_txt.htm http://www.mic-d.com/java/airydiskformation/index.html http://homepages.ihug.com.au/~flavios http://www.nidsci.org/articles/seti.html http://www.daedalon.com/velight.html http://homepages.ihug.co.nz/~ddowning/dec2001 http://www.essaybank.co.uk/free_coursework/27.html http://www.cyberclassrooms.net/~pschweiger/light.html http://www.sciencejoywagon.com/physicszone/lesson/09waves http://www.angelfire.com/scifi/dschlott http://www.play-hookey.com/optics/what_is_light.html