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Introduction to Light Stolen from Florin Albeanu 2016/07/19 Light as an oscillating electro-magnetic field ELECTRO-MAGNETIC RADIATION: Light as an oscillating electro-magnetic field Wavelength (λ) Amplitude (A) Intensity I α A2 Frequency ν=λ/c z direction of propagation Phase (φ) π/2 π t3210 z0 z 0 3π/2 Light oscillating electric field: E (x,t) = A sin(kx – ωt + ε) E (x,t) = A e i(kx – ωt + ε) k = 2π/λ; ω = 2π*ν; ε initial phase Light as wave π/2 π 0 3π/2 λ 0-2π λ/2 π λ/4 π/2 Superposition of waves • Superposition: point by point addition of amplitude of light waves • Superposition of light waves generates interference patterns • Relative phases determine whether the interference is constructive vs. destructive π/2 π 0 2π 3π/2 0-2π π π/2 constructive interference destructive interference intermediate interference Light Wavefront wavefront – all points that have same phase Direction of propagation is orthogonal to the wavefront Light Wavefront spherical wavefronts turn into planar wavefronts with increasing distance from the source Huygens Principle The wavefront of a propagating wave of light at any instant conforms to the envelope of spherical wavelets emanating from every point on the wavefront at the prior instant Reflection and Huygens Principle Light in vacuum • Light (EMR) propagates in vacuum at a speed: c • Speed = distance/time = λ / T = λ * ν = 300*106 m/s nanometers femtoseconds • The speed of EMR is constant in vacuum ~1015Hz c • … but it decreases when light travels through media Light in media Light in media Principle of least time – Pierre Fermat Reflection θ1 θ1 ' n1 n2 θ2 n2 > n1 Law of refraction (Snell’a law): n1 sinθ1 = n2 sinθ2 n1 = c/v1, n2=c/v2 Refraction Law of reflection: θ1 = θ1 ’ Refraction and Huygens Principle Wavefronts have to be continuous! Refraction… car in mud analogy Light in media Light slows down in media. How are the frequency and wavelength impacted? Light slows down – less distance traveled per cycle Frequency stays constant across media Wavelength changes Light in media - Dispersion Multicolor refraction: dispersion n1 n2 1 < nred < ngreen < nblue vblue < vgreen < vred < c n2 > n1 Light in media – Dispersion through prisms Diffraction and resolution in microscopy Superposition of two spherical wavefronts Constructive interference Destructive interference Constructive interference Optical path difference Light waves emitting from the two slits interferes – constructively or destructively depending on the difference in traveled distance Assumption holds for L >> d d ~θ θ θ d*sin θ L >> d CONSTRUCTIVE INTERFERENCE: d*sinθ = mλ DESTRUCTIVE INTERFERENCE: m = 1, 2, 3 … d*sin θ = (m + 0.5) λ The smaller the distance d between the slits, the bigger the diffraction angle θ mλ d= sinθ Information about the fine spatial detail (small slits) in the sample, is contained in higher diffraction orders – large angles Information about the coarse spatial detail (big slits) in the sample is contained in lower diffraction orders – smaller angles Optical imaging – microscopes, telescopes Devices to steer light to capture diffraction orders Objective 𝑛 (ref index) Numerical aperture Relationship between resolution and NA D pupil plane θ f n focal plane D = 2 f NA = 2 f n sin θ d = λ / sin θ Rmin(x,y) ~ λ / NA Polarization of light DIFFERENT TYPES OF POLARIZATION LINEAR POLARIZATION CIRCULAR POLARIZATION ELLIPTICAL POLARIZATION Birefringence is the optical property of a material having a refractive index that depends on the polarization and propagation direction of light. λ/2 and λ/4 waveplates Is light really a wave? Intensity (J/m2) ~ amplitude of the light electric field Energy (J) ~ frequency of the light electro-magnetic field Light oscillating electric field: E (x,t) = A sin(kx – ωt + ε) k = 2π/λ; ω = 2π*ν; ε initial phase PHOTOELECTRIC EFFECT e Frequency threshold : below this threshold, no electrons are emitted, even if intensity is increased e e METAL Classical wave theory of light: increasing either the frequency or the intensity of light would increase electron emission rate BUT Light propagates as discrete packets of energy called PHOTONS: Energy = hν h: Plank’s constant Wave - particle duality of light WAVE! Interference (laser light through a double slit) ELECTRO-MAGNETIC WAVE AS STATISTICAL DISTRIBUTION OF PHOTONS PARTICLES! Photon counting Wave - particle duality of light PARTICLES WAVE Diffraction pattern of a laser beam through a pinhole Sequence of images acquired with a position sensitive photo-multiplier tube illuminated by an image of a bar chart (exposure times at 8, 125, 1000, 10000 ms) Laser light through a double slit "It seems as though we must use sometimes the one theory and sometimes the other, while at times we may use either. (…) We have two contradictory pictures of reality; separately neither of them fully explains the phenomena of light, but together they do"