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How can I predict how big my reflection will appear in a mirror? • Think about it and we might try your solution……. Introduction to Optics Lecture 12 (See Giancoli Chapter 23) Refraction Phenomena Silas Laycock, UML, General Physics II. Spring 2014. Lecture slides not to be disseminated on the internet or shared beyond this class Optics: Summary • The Ray Model of Light • Image formed by a pinhole • Reflection; Image Formed by a Plane Mirror • Formation of Images by Spherical Mirrors • Index of Refraction • Refraction: Snell’s Law • Total Internal Reflection; Fiber Optics • Thin Lenses; Ray Tracing • The Thin Lens Equation; Magnification • Lens power and diopter • Combinations of Lenses (extra) • Lensmaker’s Equation (extra) Beam of Light bent upon entering water • Ray bends toward the normal • Angles obey Snell’s Law ConcepTest 23.5a Gone Fishin’ I To shoot a fish with a gun, 1) aim directly at the image should you aim directly at the 2) aim slightly above image, slightly above, or slightly 3) aim slightly below below? ConcepTest 23.5a Gone Fishin’ I To shoot a fish with a gun, 1) aim directly at the image should you aim directly at the 2) aim slightly above image, slightly above, or slightly 3) aim slightly below below? Due to refraction, the image will appear higher than the actual fish, so you have to aim lower to compensate. Refraction: Snell’s Law • Light changes direction when crossing a boundary from one medium to another. • This is called refraction. • The angle the outgoing ray makes with the normal is called the angle of refraction. • The angle of refraction depends on a property of the two media, called the refractive index What can you say about the index of refraction of the 3 materials shown here? A. B. C. D. n1 > n3 > n2 n2 > n 1 > n 3 n1 > n2 > n3 n3 > n2 > n1 Index of Refraction In general, light slows when traveling through a medium. The index of refraction of the medium is the ratio of the speed of light in vacuum to the speed of light in the medium: (23-4) Fine Print: In truth there is some additional subtlety, see e.g. Feynman’s lectures on Physics, volume 1 Say a laser beam is passing from air into a piece of glass (say a prism) at an incident angle of about 30 degrees. The prism is then immersed in a fluid other than air (say water). What happens? A. The angle of refraction increases B. The angle of refraction decreases C. The angle of refraction does not change because the refractive index of the glass is unchanged D. No refraction occurs Total Internal Reflection If light passes into a medium with a smaller index of refraction, the angle of refraction is larger. There is an angle of incidence for which the angle of refraction will be 90°; this is called the critical angle: If the angle of incidence is larger than this, no transmission occurs. This is called total internal reflection. See what happens when you wear your (waterproof) watch in the bath and tilt the angle of your wrist At the Critical Angle, Total internal Reflection renders the transparent glass watch face as if it were a shiny metal mirror! An individual optical fiber Fiber optic cables consist of many individual fibers, each can carry multiple optical signals High performance data cables for computers and communications Medical Endoscope, used to see inside the body Snell’s Window, or the Optical Manhole • The view from under-water is a bizarre and dramatic manifestation of refraction and total internal reflection. • No matter how deep you go, the entire world above the surface appears, compressed into a 90 degree-wide image. • The rest of the water’s surface looks like a liquid metal mirror. • This is what fish see! • Be very careful if you try to see it for yourself! Lenses • Lenses bend light by refraction, an are designed to bring light to a focus, or diverge it. • Thin lenses are those whose thickness is small compared to their radius of curvature. • They may be either converging (a) or diverging (b). • Thin lenses obey similar rules to mirrors 23.7 Thin Lenses; Ray Tracing Parallel rays are brought to a focus by a converging lens (one that is thicker in the center than it is at the edge). 23.7 Thin Lenses; Ray Tracing A diverging lens (thicker at the edge than in the center) make parallel light diverge; the focal point is that point where the diverging rays would converge if projected back. Lens Power, Diopters and Spectacles The power of a lens is the inverse of its focal length. (23-7) Lens power is measured in diopters, D. 1 D = 1 m-1 Optician use this notation because the total power of a set of lenses is the sum of their diopters The Thin Lens Equation & Magnification • The thin lens equation, and lens magnification eqn are the same as for mirrors: • The power of a lens is positive if it is converging and negative if it is diverging. • Mirrors and Lenses obey the same math rules and are used for much the same purposes. If I have a converging lens and want to make an image of a nearby object, how can I predict where the image will form? (In other words how do I calculate how to focus a camera? ) EXTRA Material: Combinations of Lenses In lens combinations, the image formed by the first lens becomes the object for the second lens (this is where object distances may be negative). EXTRA MATERIAL: Lensmaker’s Equation This useful equation relates the radii of curvature of the two lens surfaces, and the index of refraction, to the focal length. (23-10) Summary of Chapter 23 • Light paths are called rays • Angle of reflection equals angle of incidence • Index of refraction: • Upon passing into a material with larger n, ray deflects toward the normal • Plane mirror: image is virtual, upright, and the same size as the object • Focal length of the mirror: • Spherical mirror can be concave or convex • Mirror equation: • Magnification • Real image: light passes through it • Virtual image: light does not pass through • Law of refraction (Snell’s law): • Total internal reflection critical angle: • A converging lens focuses incoming parallel rays to a point • A diverging lens spreads incoming rays so that they appear to come from a point • Power of a lens (diopters): • Thin lens equation: Heiligenschein - Dew drops acting as millions of tiny spherical mirrors or lenses. Only YOU can see your own halo, try it and try to explain why. Highly Recommended Reading Team Research Challenge • In teams you will select a piece of technology that relies on applications of the physics in this course. Each team member then researches the physics behind a different component. They discuss as a group outside class (in person, by Piazza, email, etc.) and produce a report. Then they present the report to the class, using (upto) one slide or diagram per person. Ideas –your own suggestions encouraged! • • • • • • • • • Radio/CD player [radio receiver, CD player, Battery, Speaker] Digital Camera [Optics, Image sensor, Flash, Display] X-ray imager [X-ray Source, Detector, Display, Safety] Nuclear power station [Reactor, Generator, Transmission, Safety and Control] Laptop computer [Hard Drive, Display, Optical Drive, Battery, CPU] Nuclear Weapons Electric Guitar Alternative Energy generation Medical Physics Applications Think about this over spring break, so that you will be ready to get started.