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Let there be ... Light 1 The Nature of Light What is Light? By the 17th century, light had been observed to… 1. travel in straight lines 2. reflect 3. refract 4. transmit energy from one place to another Two theories could explain these phenomena. 2 The WAVE THEORY, advocated by Christian Huygens and Robert Hooke, said that light was a wave. The PARTICLE THEORY, advocated by Isaac Newton and later by Pierre Laplace, said that light was made up of a stream of tiny particles. 3 particle theory The more popular theory was the sifjrnm of fneu themdu reputation Isaac Newton. because fjeruis wo uidf nseufof jfkglb. Newton’s particle theory could easily explain the straight line travel of light, reflection, and energy transmission, but had trouble explaining refraction. Newton’s explanation of refraction required that light must travel faster in water than in air. Huygen’s wave theory could easily explain reflection, energy transmission, and refraction, but had difficulty explaining the straight line travel of light. The wave theory’s explanation of refraction required that light must travel 4 slower in water than in air. The debate among the two sides continued through the mid 1800’s. 1801 -interference of light was discovered 1816 - diffraction of light (actually observed in the 1600’s but not given much significance) was explained using interference principles Neither phenomenon could be explained satisfactorily by the particle theory. The final blow to the particle theory came in 1850 when Jean Foucault discovered that light traveled faster in air than in water. 5 It was then widely accepted that light was a wave, but what kind of wave? In 1865, James Maxwell developed ideas begun by Michael Faraday into a series of equations that proposed the electromagnetic wave theory. It said that light was a type of E/M wave: a periodic disturbance involving electric and magnetic forces. In 1885, Heinrich Hertz experimentally confirmed the E/M theory. 6 At the end of the century, many physicists felt that all the significant laws of physics had been discovered. Hertz even stated, “The wave theory of light is, from the point of view of human beings, a certainty.” That view was soon to change. Around 1900, the photoelectric effect was observed. “the emission of electrons by a substance when illuminated by E/M radiation” Careful study of the photoelectric effect was performed by many scientists. 7 PHOTOELECTRIC EFFECT •The ejection of electrons from certain metals when exposed to high enough frequencies of light. •It reinforced the particle theory of light. 8 PHOTOELECTRIC EFFECT • The light has to be at a certain frequency(threshold) where each individual photon has a certain amount of energy. • Brightness or Intensity is determined by the number of photons in the light beam • If the light is at the correct frequency and is brighter the metal will emit more electrons vs. a light that is dimmer which would emit fewer electrons. 9 The wave theory could not totally explain the photoelectric effect, but a variation of the old particle theory could! Max Planck and Albert Einstein subsequently proposed the QUANTUM THEORY. The Quantum Theory The transfer of energy between light radiation and matter occurs in discrete units called quanta, the magnitude of which depends on the frequency of radiation. 10 Although we still commonly characterize light as a wave, it is actually neither a wave nor a particle. It seems to have characteristics of both. The modern view of the nature of light recognizes the dual character: Light is radiant energy transported in photons that are guided along their path by a wave field. 11 This leads us to the Duality Principle: Light is ... • a wave when it acts like a wave • a particle when it acts like a particle 12 13 Microwaves Radio Larger Waves Visible Infrared X-Ray Ultraviolet Gamma Smaller Waves 14 Do you use the radio, television, play video games or heat food with a microwave? If you answered YES – then you already use electromagnetic waves every time you do one of these activities! 15 1. Produced by the motion of electrically charged particles (photons) and magnetic field. 2. Arranged according to their wavelength and frequency on the Electromagnetic Spectrum. 3. Do NOT need a medium to transfer energy – often travel through a vacuum. (no air) -Example: Light from the stars -Satellites sending to TV’s radios 16 Red-Orange-Yellow-Green-Blue-Indigo-Violet Wavelength is inversely proportional to frequency and energy 17 1. Radio Waves • • • • Longest Wavelengths & Lowest Frequency Have lowest photon energy Modulation-change radio wave frequency Used in TV, Cell Phones, MRI, Radar-airports, weather • Higher frequency radio waves are called Microwaves and are used in communication. 18 Question: Why do you think they make passengers in airplanes and visitors in hospitals turn off their cell phones? 19 2. Infrared Radiation • Has a wavelength () slightly longer than Visible Light on the Electromagnetic Spectrum. • Felt as Heat • Examples: Security Monitoring Systems, night vision googles Some Restaurants to keep food warm Auto paint shops to dry car finishes Thermal imaging 20 3. Visible Light • Only part on the Electromagnetic Spectrum that you can see. • Causes CHEMICAL reactions, like: Photosynthesis – plants to make own food In your eyes – allows you to see 21 Colors of Visible Light From the LONGEST wavelength and the Lowest frequency to the SHORTEST wavelength to the HIGHEST frequency the colors of visible light are: RED-ORANGE-YELLOW-GREEN-BLUE-INDIGO-VIOLET You can remember this by remembering… ROY G. BIV …the colors of the rainbow. 22 4. Ultraviolet Radiation • Exposure to UV rays (the sun or artificial sunlight) enables the skin cells to produce Vitamin D – that is needed for healthy bones and teeth. • Overexposure to UV rays kills healthy cells and may cause skin cancer. • Used in hospitals to kill bacteria and sterilize surgical instruments, tanning beds, SUN 23 Question: Why do you think that it is important to wear sunscreen if going outside – even on a cloudy day? 24 5. X-Rays • Carry high energy and have greater penetrating power that travels through skin and muscles. • When x-rays hit dense material – like a bone – then the wave is absorbed and the bones appear brighter. • Doctors, dentists, airport scanners, hospitals 25 Questions: Have you ever gotten x-rays taken at the dentist or doctor’s office? Ever wonder why they put that jacket on you and then leave of the room? Are x-rays safe? 26 6. Gamma Rays • Shortest Wavelengths & Highest Frequency • Emitted from the nuclei of radioactive atoms • Concentrated rays are destructive and are used to kill cancer cells. 27 28 • Albert Einstein – in 1905 hypothesized that light is composed of tiny energy particles • He named these particles – PHOTONS. These are different from atoms in matter. • The highest energy photons emit the highest frequency and can damage matter & living cells. 29 1729 Light Qualities • • • • Carries heat and warmth Has color Can be bright or dim Travels almost unimaginably fast and far, 300 million meters per second • Travels in a straight line, but can be bent by lenses or reflected by mirrors • 20% of U.S. electricity use is in lighting. 30 30 1. Incandescent Light • Tungsten (W) • a thin wire filament is heated to white hot and emits light. • Uses: toaster, light bulbs, incubator • 80% more heat than light. 31 31 2. Fluorescent Light • Phosphorus (P) • Bulb filled with UV gas absorbs UV rays and then gives off light • Under low pressure • School and office lighting • 4X as much light as incandescent • Less heat given off • More efficient • Last longer 32 32 3. Neon Light • Neon (Ne) • Electricity passes through a tube, excites Neon and causes it to emit light. • Advertisement, business signs. • The color of the light depends upon the gas and the coating of the tube. 33 33 The type of matter determines the amount of light it absorbs or reflects. 34 34 What matter does with light? 1. Absorb: if the light falling on the material is of “natural frequency” 2. Re-emit: after absorption it can then release light (glow-in-the-dark) 35 35 What matter does with light?Continued 3. Reflect: If the light is not of “natural frequency” 4. Transmit: Allows the light to pass through the material ` 36 36 • Opaque – • does NOT transmit light • only reflects or absorbs light • completely blocks out light • example: wall and wood • Translucent – • transmits some light • mostly reflect or absorbs light • examples: frosted or stained glass • Transparent – • mostly transmits light • reflects very little light • example: windows 37 37 The color we see objects depends on: 1. The kind of light emitted from the object. 2. The kind of light transmitted by an object. 3. The kind of light reflected by the object. 4. The kind of light shown on an object. 3826 38 The 3 primary colors of light: • Red, Green, and Blue • Red, green and blue combine to make white light • All other colors of light are made by combining these in different ratios. • Additive colors 39 39 The 3 primary pigments are: • Magenta, Yellow, and Cyan • Magenta, Yellow and Cyan combine to make BLACK pigment • Used in paints and crayons • Subtractive colors Magenta yellow cyan 40 40 • The color of an object depends on both the pigment present and the light shown on it. • Example: White shirt with red light shown on it will appear to be red, because there is only red light to reflect. 41 41 How do we see color? • Retina in the eye collects light, chemical reaction changes to nerve impulse and transmitted to brain • Photoreceptors – Rod cells- respond to brightness of light, white, shades of gray or black – Cone cells- respond to color, red, green and blue – Our brain sees combinations of red, green and blue to make all the shades of colors we see • Colorblindness- most common defected red cones and sometimes green. 42 Photoluminescence Materials that absorb light energy, then gives light off later – Phosphorus atoms embedded in plastic absorb light energy and slowly release the light in a glow-in-the-dark process. – The phosphorus atoms absorb energy as its electrons move from a low energy level to a high energy level. – When the electrons fall back to the low energy level the glow is given off. eP&N absorbs light and gains energy to move out an energy level releases energy and falls back in and gives off light 43 Polarization Vertical Polarization (allows only vertical light through) Horizontal Polarization (allows only horizontal light through) Vertical and Horizontal Polarization (cuts out most light) 44 • LASER – Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation – a single frequency of light • Fiber Optics – Light pipes that use total internal reflection to carry light and signals from one point to another – Example-telephone calls, television signals, computer data 45 • Optical Illusionerroneous perception of reality • Diffraction Gratingsmall slits in a material that when looked through breaks white light into the spectrum-ROYGBIV • Filter-a transparent material that transmits one or more colors of light but absorbs all others 46 Two color models • RGB model– The primary colors used to construct an image on a color TV monitor – Tiny RBG dots separated by black lines – All devices that make their own light use RGB model • CMYK model– Color-making process based upon subtraction of color – Reflection of color rather than its transmission – Printing inks, fabric dyes, even color of your skin 47 48 • Optics-the study of how light behaves – Optic devices-mirror, lens, prism, fiber optics • Object-many real physical things that give off or reflect light rays • Image – collection and use of light – a picture of objects that are formed in places where light rays from the object meet • Focus-(focal point) the place where all light rays from the object meet to form the image • Lens-type of optical device used to bend light 49 Angle of incidence = Angle of reflection 50 1. Plane mirror • flat surface • virtual image 51 2. Concave mirror • curves inward to form a focal point • Light rays CONVERGE – come together • Examples: telescopes, searchlights, flashlights > > > •Focal point -place where rays of light cross after they have been bent 52 3. Convex mirror • curves outward and forms no focal point • Light rays DIVERGE – Spread out • Examples: rear-view mirrors, store security mirrors > > > > 53 What is refraction? Refraction is the bending of light. 54 Refraction • Caused by a change in the waves speed when it moves from one material to another • Glass, plastic, water • Amount of refraction depends on the wavelength of the wave • Short wavelengths bend more • Long wavelengths bend less 55 Refraction concluded • Index of refraction-ratio of speed of light reduced when it passes through a material • Higher index-more bending • Prism-polished triangle shape of glass that bends different frequencies of light into separate colors • Rainbow are produced by raindrops refracting sunlight. 56 1. Plane lens • flat surface • Rays go straight through • Examples: Regular window and microscope slide 57 2. Concave Lens • Thinner in center than at the edges • Light rays DIVERGE – spread apart • Used to correct nearsightedness • Examples: glasses 58 3. Convex Lens • Thicker in the center than at the edges • Light rays CONVERGE – come together • Used to correct farsightedness • Examples: magnifying glass and microscope lens 59