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Repetitorium in optics Pavol Miškovský Metódy optickej spektroskopie LS 2014 EMB 2014 1 Light as electromagnetic waves Huygens was unconvinced by the particle theory of light advanced by Newton. In 1687 he published a book „Traité de la Lumiere“, in which he suggested a theory to explain the wave-like nature of light. Huygens' theories neatly explained the laws of refraction, diffraction, interference, and reflection Maxwell unified the theories of electricity and magnetism. Electricity, magnetism and light can now be understood as aspects of a single phenomenon: electromagnetic waves. Using four equations, he described and quantified the relationships between electricity, magnetism and the propagation of electromagnetic waves. The equations are now known as Maxwell's Equations In 1862 Maxwell wrote: "We can scarcely avoid the conclusion that light consists in the transverse undulations of the same medium which is the cause of electric and magnetic phenomena." EMB 2014 2 The term electromagnetic radiation, coined by Maxwell, is derived from the characteristic electric and magnetic properties common to all forms of wave-like energy. Basic characteristics of electromagnetic waves Light as transversal waves: An electromagnetic wave travels or propagates in a direction that is oriented at right angles to the vibrations of both the electric (E) and magnetic (H) oscillating field vectors, transporting energy from the radiation source to an undetermined final destination. The two oscillating energy fields are mutually perpendicular and vibrate in phase following the mathematical form of a sine wave. Electric and magnetic field vectors are not only perpendicular to each other, but are also T T perpendicular to the direction of wave propagation. 1 1 2 I S dt E dt Light intensity: T0 T0 . H . E Poynting vector: S E H Average energy pres unit area and per unit time Transport of energy per unit time across a unit area Plane harmonic electromagnetic wave: is wave for which the areas of equal phase are planes and which is periodic in time with the periode T=1/n and in space with the period l E r, t E 0 r cos t k r aplitude phase The complex presentation E Re E Re E 0 e EMB 2014 ω angular frequency 2n k is propagation number k 2 / l it k r I 3 1 2 * 1 EE 2 E0 2 Full complex presentation of plane harmonic wave: E E 0e i t k r 0 E 0 e i ei t k r E c0 ei t k r 0 Such wave is fully represented by polarization, frequency n [Hz], resp. energy E[eV], wavelength l[nm] resp. wavenumber [cm-1], for which: Quantum theory of light: E Energy of photon p c m0 0 Momentum of photon mass of photon group velocity (speed of energy propagation) a phase velocity (speed of equivalent phase planes), for which: v' v l EMB 2014 dv l dn v 1 dl n d l n ´n for nondispersive media 4 hn hc l hcl VISIBLE LIGHT Frequencies: 4 - 7.5 x 1014 Hz Wavelengths: 750 - 400 nm Quantum energies: 1.65 - 3.1 eV EMB 2014 5 INFRARED LIGHT WAVEFORMES OF LIGHT Frequencies: 0.003 – 4x1014 Hz Wavelengths: 1 mm - 750 nm Quantum energies: 0.0012 - 1.65 eV ULTRAVIOLET LIGHT Frequencies: 7.5 x 1014 - 3 x 1016 Hz Polychomatic vs. monochromatic Wavelengths: 400 nm - 10 nm E t Quantum energies: 3.1 - 124 eV EMB 2014 E m 6 m exp im t Polarized light Polarization is general property of all vector waves. For all these waves, polarization means a time behavior of one of vectors associated with these waves observed in a defined place. For light this vector is the vector of electric-field vector E. Thus, for light: light polarization is defined as the time development of the of electric-field vector in the plane perpendicular to light propagation direction. Description of light polarization We can recognize three types of light polarization: elliptical, circular and linear EMB 2014 7 Elliptical polarization For the elliptically polarized light the end point of E will trace out an ellipse, in a fixed-apace perpendicular to k (direction of light propagation) Polarization is characterized by four parameters: AZIMUT θ 2 Eb Ea 2 e AMPLITUDE A A E E ABSOLUTE PHASE δ 1 e 1 e tg ELLIPTICITY e 2 a 2 b 1 2 4 4 E a A cos Eb A sin Elliptically polarized wave = superposition of two lineary polarized and perpendicular waves with a phase shift x y E x E0 x cos t E y Eoy cost Ez 0 EMB 2014 Ex Eox 2 Ey Ey 2 Ex cos sin 2 Eox Eoy Eoy 2 Equation of an ellipse for (Ex, Ey) - coordinate system 8 Linear and circular polarization Linear as well as circular polarizations may be considered to be special cases of elliptically polarized light The polarization type will depend on phase shift Depending on , the equation of the ellipse can be transormed to an equation of a stragith line (linear polarization) and/or circle (circular polarization) Linear polarization: the phase shift of two linearly polarized and perpendicular components is Ex m E0 x 1 y x m Ey E0 y Circular polarization: the phase shift of two linearly polarized and perpendicular components is y x m E0 y E0 x E EMB 2014 9 2 E x2 E y2 E 2 Methods of polarized light generation Polarized light may be generate from unpolarized (natural) light basically by: reflection, refraction, absorption and scattering Polarization by reflection Reflection coefficients for waves polarized parallel and perpendicular to the plane of incidence are different. If the angle of incident light corresponds to that for which the reflection coefficient for the parallel component is zero (Brewster angle), the refracted light is linearly polarized perpendicularly to the incident plane (Fresnel equations). Polarization by bi-refraction (birefringence) When light reflected from the pen is incident upon the surface of the Iceland spar crystal (dichroic crystal), it is refracted into two wavefronts, polarized at right angles to one another, and traveling at different velocities (optical anizotropy). This splitting of light is known as double refraction or birefringence ( bi-refraction). One of the light waves, termed the ordinary ray travels straight through the crystal (its image remains stationary), while the other ray is refracted to a significant degree. The refracted ray is termed the extra-ordinary ray. EMB 2014 10 Polarization by absorption – dichroic polarizers The polarizers illustrated in Figure 1 are actually filters containing long-chain polymer molecules that are oriented in a single direction. Only the incident light that is vibrating in the same plane as the oriented polymer molecules is passed through the first polarizing filter, while light vibrating at right angles to the polymer plane is absorbed. The polarizing direction of the first polarizer is oriented vertically to the incident beam so it will pass only the waves having vertical electric-field vectors. The wave passing through the first polarizer is subsequently blocked by the second polarizer, because this polarizer is oriented horizontally with respect to the electric-field vector in the light wave. I I 0cos 2 EMB 2014 11 Speed of light Light traveling in a uniform substance, or medium, propagates in a straight line at a relatively constant speed, unless it is refracted, reflected, diffracted, or perturbed in some other manner. This well-established scientific fact is not a product of the Atomic Age or even the Renaissance, but was originally promoted by the ancient Greek scholar, Euclid, somewhere around 350 BC in his landmark treatise Optica. When light traveling in a vacuum enters a new transparent medium, such as air, water, or glass, the speed is reduced in proportion to the refractive index of the new material. vacuum (n=1): 300 000 km/s, water (n=1.3): 225 000 km/s, glass (n=1.5): 200 000 km/s diamond (n=2.4): 125 000 km/s Roemer 1676 – Shortly after the invention of telescope, Danish astronomer Ole Roemer was the first scientist to make a rigorous attempt to estimate the speed of light. By studying Jupiter's moon „Io“ and its frequent eclipses, Roemer was able to predict the periodicity of an eclipse period for the moon and calculate the speed of light v= 229 000 km/s Recent measurements by the same method: v= 298 000 km/s EMB 2014 12 Jean-Bernard-Leon Foucault (1862) Albert Abraham Michelson 1878 Foucault developed a way to measure the speed of light with extreme accuracy – method of rotating mirrors (his doctoral thesis) c 8ad b 298000km/ s EMB 2014 Determined speed of light by more sophisticated Method of rotating mirrors: 299 909 km/s Finally in 1983, more than 300 years after the first serious measurement attempt, the speed of light was defined as being 299,792.458 kilometers per second by the Seventeenth General Congress on Weights and Measures. 13 EMB 2014 Estimate Kilometers/Second Date Investigator Method 1667 Galileo Galilei Covered Lanterns 333.5 1676 Ole Roemer Jupiter's Moons 220,000 1726 James Bradley Stellar Aberration 301,000 1834 Charles Wheatstone Rotating Mirror 402,336 1838 François Arago Rotating Mirror 1849 Armand Fizeau Rotating Wheel 315,000 1862 Leon Foucault Rotating Mirror 298,000 1868 James Clerk Maxwell Theoretical Calculations 284,000 1875 Marie-Alfred Cornu Rotating Mirror 299,990 1879 Albert Michelson Rotating Mirror 299,910 1888 Heinrich Rudolf Hertz Electromagnetic Radiation 300,000 1889 Edward Bennett Rosa Electrical Measurements 300,000 1890s Henry Rowland Spectroscopy 301,800 1907 Edward Bennett Rosa and Noah Dorsey Electrical Measurements 299,788 1923 Andre Mercier Electrical Measurements 299,795 1926 Albert Michelson Rotating Mirror (Interferometer) 299,798 1928 August Karolus and Otto Mittelstaedt Kerr Cell Shutter 299,778 1932 to 1935 Michelson and Pease Rotating Mirror (Interferometer) 299,774 1947 Louis Essen Cavity Resonator 299,792 1949 Carl I. Aslakson Shoran Radar 299,792.4 1951 Keith Davy Froome Radio Interferometer 299,792.75 1973 Kenneth M. Evenson Laser 299,792.457 1978 Peter Woods and Colleagues Laser 299,792.4588 14 Light: Particle or a Wave? Duality of light, particle-like and/or wave-like behavior. The exact nature of visible light is a mystery that has puzzled man for centuries. In the early eighteenth century, the argument about the nature of light had turned the scientific community into divided camps that fought vigorously over the validity of their favorite theories. One group of scientists, who subscribed to the wave theory, centered their arguments on the discoveries of Christiaan Huygens. The opposing camp cited Sir Isaac Newton's experiments as proof that light traveled as a shower of particles, each proceeding in a straight line until it was refracted, absorbed, reflected, diffracted or disturbed in some other manner. Only during the first decades of the twentieth century was enough compelling evidence collected to provide a comprehensive answer, and to everyone's surprise, both theories turned out to be correct, at least in part duality of light Refraction of light – Huygens' theory Support for wave theory WT: velocity of light in any substance is inversely proportion to its refractive index – velocity decreasing PT: additional force which cause the refraction – velocity increasing 200 years of fight based on supporting experiments: Reflection of light •Refraction •Reflection •Difraction •Polarization •Photoelectric phenomena •Compton scattering EMB 2014 Support for particle theory Both the particle and wave theories adequately explain reflection from a smooth surface. However, the particle theory also suggests that if the surface is very rough, the particles bounce away at a variety of angles, scattering the light. This theory fits very closely to experimental observation. 15 Diffraction of particles and waves Thomas Young 1801 Newton 1704 (Opticks): "Light is never known to follow crooked passages nor to bend into the shadow". This concept is consistent with the particle theory, which proposes that light particles must always travel in straight lines. Like waves in water, light waves encountering the edge of an object appear to bend around the edge and into its geometric shadow, which is a region that is not directly illuminated by the light beam. Young believed that light was composed of waves. He used a screen containing a single, narrow slit to produce a coherent light beam (containing waves that propagate in phase) from ordinary sunlight. When the sun's rays encounter the slit, they spread out or diffract to produce a single wavefront. If this front is allowed to illuminate a second screen having two closely spaced slits, two additional sources of coherent light, perfectly in step with each other are produced and interfere. Young postulated that light of different colors was composed of waves having different lengths, a fundamental concept that is widely accepted today. In contrast, the particle theory advocates envisioned that various colors were derived from particles having either different masses or traveling at different speeds. Polarization Support for wave theory If a beam of light is allowed to impact a polarizer, only light rays oriented parallel to the polarizing direction are able to pass through the polarizer. Support for wave theory EMB 2014 Strong support for wave theory 16 The effect is easily explained with the wave theory, but no manipulation of the particle theory can explain how light is blocked by the second polarizer. By the middle of the 19th century, scientists were becoming increasingly convinced of the wave-like character of light. James Clerk Maxwell: all forms of electromagnetic radiation represent a continuous spectrum, and travel through a vacuum at the same speed: 186,000 miles per second (Maxwell's calculation) . Maxwell's discovery effectively nailed the coffin of the particle theory. It seemed that the basic questions of light and optical theory had finally been answered. A major blow to the wave theory = photoelectric effect ( Philipp Lenard 1880) Lenard used a prism to split white light into its component colors, and then selectively focused each color onto a metal plate to expel electrons. Electrons escaping their atomic bonds had energies that were dependent on the wavelength of light, not the intensity. This is contrary to what would be expected from the wave theory. Lenard also discovered a link between wavelength and energy: shorter wavelengths produced electrons having greater amounts of energy. Max Planck 1900: Planck ad hoc proposed that radiation energy can exists as discrete entities which are proportional to light frequency Black body radiation EMB 2014 E hn 17 = quantum = photon E mc2 Albert Einstein ~ 1905 In 1905, Albert Einstein postulated (on the basis of Planck theory) that light might actually have some particle characteristics, regardless of the evidence for a wave-like nature. In developing his quantum theory, Einstein suggested mathematically that electrons attached to atoms in a metal can absorb a specific quantity of light (first termed a quantum, but later changed to a photon) and thus have the energy to escape. Arthur H. Compton ~ 1920 Luis-Victor de Brolie Einstein's theory was solidified in the 1920s by the experiments of American physicist Arthur H. Compton, who demonstrated that photons had momentum, a necessary requisite to support the theory that matter and energy are interchangeable. Louis-Victor de Broglie proposed that all matter and radiation have properties that resemble both a particle and a wave. De Broglie, following Max Planck's lead, extrapolated Einstein's famous formula relating mass and energy to include Planck's constant: E = mc2 = hn Duality of light – conclussion: De Broglie's work, which relates the frequency of a wave to the energy and mass of a particle, was fundamental in the development of a new field that would ultimately be utilized to explain both the wave-like and particle-like nature of light. At times light behaves as a particle, and at other times as a wave. EMB 2014 18 THE PROPAGATION OF LIGHT Reflection and Refraction Interference Diffraction EMB 2014 19 Reflection and Refraction of light Refraction of light When electromagnetic radiation, in the form of visible light, travels from one substance or medium into another, Reflection of light (and other forms of electromagnetic radiation) occurs when the waves encounter a surface or other boundary that does not absorb the energy the light waves may undergo a phenomenon known as refraction, which is of the radiation and bounces the waves away from the surface. The simplest example of visible light reflection is the surface of a smooth pool of water, where manifested by a bending or change in direction of the light. Refraction occurs as light passes from one medium to another only when there is a difference incident light is reflected in an orderly manner to produce a clear image of in the index of refraction between the two materials the scenery surrounding the pool. Reflection of light The history of the refraction of light is younger Ptolemaios – As early as the first century Ptolemy attempted to mathematically explain the amount of bending (or refraction) light Willebroad Snell (17th cent.): succeeded in developing a law that defined a value related to the ratio of the incident and refracted angles, which has subsequently been termed the bending power or refractive index of a substance. Snell never discovered the reason for this refraction effect. Some of the earliest accounts of light reflection originate from the ancient Greek Euclid, who conducted a series of experiments around 300 BC, and appears to have had a good understanding of how light is reflected. However, it wasn't until a millennium and a half later that the Arab scientist Alhazen proposed a law describing exactly what happens to a light ray when it strikes a smooth surface and then bounces off into space. EMB 2014 Christian Huygens (1678) devised a mathematical relationship to explain Snell's observations and proposed that the refractive index of a material is related to the speed at which light travels through the substance. (n=c/v) 20 As in the life, everything can be simple and/or complicated. But more deeply we go, more interesting and challenging the life is! The same rule you can find in physics (optics). More deeply we explore the processes of reflection, refraction and scattering, the more challenging they become. Beyond that many fascinating questions need to be address: How does light move trough a material medium? What happens to it as it does? What light appears to travel at the speed other than c when photons can only exist at c?T Mathematical description of reflection and refraction of light – Fresnell relations (1823) Problem: found association between amplitudes of incident, reflected and refracted waves - Fresnell relations Incident light Schema of arrangement Components of the electric-field-vector A – amplitude of incident light T – amplitude of refracted light R – amplitude of reflected light E x( i ) AII cos i e i i E y( i ) A e i i because H E z( i ) AII sin i e i i H x(i ) A cos i r.s ( i ) i t v1 EMB 2014 x sin i z cos i t v1 H y( i ) AII 1 e i H z( i ) A sin i 21 1 e i i 1 e i i i sE Boundary conditions: tangential components of field vectors Must be continuous, thus: E x(i ) E x( r ) E x(t ) E y( i ) E y( r ) E y( t ) H x(i ) H x( r ) H x(t ) H y( i ) H y( r ) H y( t ) In using relations: Fresnel equations 1823 cosr = cos( - i) = - cosi cos i ( AII RII ) cos t TII 1 ( AII RII ) n TII T 2 TII 2n1 cos i n2 cos i n1 cos AII t 2 sin t cos i AII sin( i t ) cos( i t ) T 2 sin t cos i A sin( i t ) RII tan( i t ) AII tan( i t ) sin( i t ) A sin( i t ) 2 cos t T Independent perpendicular and parallel components Fresnel equations 2n1 cos i A n1 cos i n2 cos t RII n2 cos i n1 cos t AII n2 cos i n1 cos t R n1 cos i n2 cos t A n1 cos i n2 cos t EMB 2014 2 2 n 2 n12 11 n1 TII R A R T 1 cos i ( A R ) sin i v 1 sin t v2 i t 90 0 22 Simple way – Laws of reflection and refraction derived from the Principle of Fermat Fermat´s principle „The actual path between two points taken by a beam of light is the one that is traversed in the least time“ Laws of reflection derived from the Principle of Fermat The length of path from point A to point B We are looking a minimal time for light path the distance from A to B (minimal time is for minimal path) x a x 2 EMB 2014 23 2 (d x) b (d x) 2 2 what is sin i sin r i r Laws of refraction derived from the Principle of Fermat The same approach as for reflection. Light path from the point A to the point B in time t. We are looking a minimal time for light path the distance from A to B School of biophotonics Kosice June 2013 24 Brewster Angle derived from the Snell´s law David Brewster 1781-1868 i arctg EMB 2014 25 nt ni Practical applications of Laws of reflection and refraction – geometrical optics Figure generated by a lens can be constructed in using just 3 principal rays • • • EMB 2014 Ray parallel to the optical axis will project trough focal point Ray going trough the lens center is not decline Ray going trough the focal point wil project parallel to optical axis 26 EMB 2014 27 Mirrors Image created by concave mirror – real image Ray diagram is the same as for lenses (the same principal rays) Real inverted Image created by convex mirror – virtual image Real direct EMB 2014 28 Interference of Light Waves The formation of an image in the microscope relies on a complex interplay between two critical optical phenomena: diffraction and interference. Examples of interference Morpho didius butterfly (Amazon rain forest) The dynamic interplay of colors in a soap bubble derives from simultaneous reflection of light from both the inside and outside surfaces of the exceedingly thin soap film. The two surfaces are very close together (separated by only a few micrometers) and light reflected from the inner surface interferes both constructively and destructively with light reflected from the outer surface. EMB 2014 The intense blue wing color is the consequence of color-producing structures fastened to the scales layering the butterfly's wings. Plates on the ridges arising from thin layers of chitin that are separated by air spaces at distances equal to one-half the wavelength of blue light mimic a natural diffraction grating. 29 2 l S Interference on thin plan-parallel layer 4 l0 n , h cos ' Because the reflection changes the phase by , the resulting difference in phase is : 4 l0 n , h cos ' 4h l0 n , 2 n 2 sin 2 In using realtions for intereference extrems Calculate the phase shift Because we are looking for interference, we have to calculate the path difference between 2 rays which creates the phase difference = interference I I1 I 2 2 I1 I 2 cos 0,2 ,4 ,... I min I1 I 2 2 I1I 2 S n , AB BC nAN See just geometry h AB BC cos ' AN AC sin 2htg ' sin n ' sin ' n sin EMB 2014 S 2n , h cos ' and substitute 30 ,3 ,5 .... Thomas Young's Double Slit Experiment Thomas Young 1801 We need to calculate the phase difference between these rays 2 s1 S1 P d a2 y2 x 2 s2 S 2 P d a2 y2 x 2 because s22 s12 2 xd 2 s2 s1 2a s thus connected phase difference interference max and min are expressed by I Physical description of Young´s experiment School of biophotonics Kosice June 2013 nxd a 2 nxd l0 a I1 I 2 2 I1 I 2 cos ´distance between interf. max x malo , nd ´distance between interf. min x malo nd 31 2 xd s2 s1 xd a S n s considering refraction index Demonstration of the wave-like character of light through the phenomenon of interference using diffraction techniques. s s2 s1 for for m 0,1,2,... m 1 3 5 , , ... 2 2 2 Diffraction Diffraction of the light 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. The light that passes through the opening is partially redirected due to an interaction with the edges. When the wavelength exceeds the size of the slit, diffraction of the light occurs, causing the formation of a diffraction pattern consisting of a bright central portion (the primary maximum), bounded on either side by a series of secondary maxima separated by dark regions (minima). The maxima and minima are created by interference of diffracted light waves. For l > d, diffraction is observed sin ml The terms diffraction and scattering are often used interchangeably and are considered to be almost synonymous in many cases. Diffraction describes a specialized case of light scattering in which an object with regularly repeating features (such as a periodic objector a diffraction grating) produces an orderly diffraction pattern EMB 2014 32 d Diffraction is a limited factor for optical resolution Because the image-forming light rays are diffracted, a single point of light is never really seen as a point in the microscope, but rather as a diffraction pattern containing a central disk or spot of light having a finite diameter and encircled by a fading series of rings. The central diffraction spot or disk is called an Airy disk, (Sir George Airy). The Airy disk pattern is a direct result of diffraction, and demonstrates the alteration of points of light that make up an image using an optical instrumentsuch as a microscope. Experimentally, resolution can be increased by decreasing the wavelength of light utilized to image the specimen (from white light to blue, for example) or by increasing the numerical aperture of the objective and condenser combination The radius of the diffraction spot (r) for a point of light in the image plane is given by the related expression: r 1.22 l Rayleigh´s criterion 2 NA Two maxima of the same intensity can be resolved up to the limit for which, the maximum of the firts one is in the position of the minimum of the second one D r 0.61 l the numerical aperture (NA) of a microscope objective is defined as NA n sin is half angle aperture EMB 2014 33 NA Interaction of light with bio-matter EMB 2014 34 Microwaves radiation Atmosferické oblasti absorpcie a priepustnosti elektromagnetického žiarenia microwave (n=2.25 GHz resp. l=12.2 cm) – water absorption EMB 2014 35 Infrared radiation Green house effect EMB 2014 36 Visible radiation Absorption by skin 0.4 až 0.7 mm (energie 1.6 – 3.2 eV) Absorption a) and fluorescence b) by pigments of human skin EMB 2014 37 Ultraviolet radiation 400 až 10 nm (energie 3.1 – 124 eV) Absorption a) and fluorescence b) by pigments of human skin Autofluorescence of cancer tissue Hypericin fluorescence in vessels EMB 2014 38 RTG radiation Physiological effects of electromagnetic radiation on human body Wavelengths < 10 nm (energies > 124 eV) EMB 2014 39 How does light move trough a material medium? What happens to it as it does? Interaction of light with matter sample Source of light IA IR IT ISC Maxwell´s equations in material medium Material medium is characterized by: •permittivity ε •permeability μ Used model: •linear optics •we do not consider magnetic field interaction with matter (μr=1) EMB 2014 40 rot H j D t div D r rot E B t div B 0 P 0 E E - E electric-field vector - H magnetic field vector - D electric induction vector - B magnetic induction vector - j current density vector - r density of free charges j M 0 M H E electric susceptibility M magnetic susceptibility E conductivity 0 1 E 0 r 0 1 M 0 r r D 0 E P r B 0 H M 0 permittivity of vacuum B H 0 permeability of vacuum EMB 2014 relative permittivity relative permeability 41 D E H t E rot H t rot E div E 0 div H 0 v 2 E E 2 0 t wave equation 1 0 r and because 0 r vc n v 1 1 0 0 r r n r r What about next steps ? 1. Absorption (complex space) 2. Dispersion () EMB 2014 42 c r r c n n r 2 2 N e f 0i r1 n 2 K A2 1 0i i i mi 0 02i 2 2 gi 2 2 i 2 N 0i ei f i g i r 2 2nK A 2 2 2 m i 0i gi 2 2 i 0 2 EMB 2014 43 Energy Jablonsky diagram F= S2 Internal conversion kic F= hnF hnA EMB 2014 Absorption Fluorescence Lifetime of fluorescence [Q] kQ Intersystem conversion kisc kF 2 1 0 Quantum yield of fluorescence 1 1 = kF kF+[Q].kQ+ki S1 F kF ki kic T1 kp hnP Phosphorescence 44 44 Resources: 1.Eugen Hecht: OPTICS, 4th edition, Addison Wesley 2002 2.Max Born & Emil Wolf: Principles of optics, Pergamon press,1964 Thank you for your attention EMB 2014 45 45