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Discussion Notes and Class Agenda Physics 240 April 12, 2006 Problem Assignments Problem Groups 32.48 1, 3 32.18 5, 7 32.52 2, 4 32.14 6, 8 Review Sessions for Final Exam Wednesday April 19, 2006 10:00 am—Noon Room 296 Dennison and Thursday April 20, 2006 Noon—4:00 pm Physics Help Room Discussion Notes and Class Agenda Physics 240 April 17, 2006 Problem Assignments Problem Groups 33.18 1, 3 33.40 5, 7 33.28 2, 4 33.34 6, 8 Review Sessions for Final Exam Wednesday April 19, 2006 10:00 am—Noon Room 296 Dennison and Thursday April 20, 2006 Noon—4:00 pm Physics Help Room 2 Discussion: Reflection, Refraction, Dispersion and Polarization We now consider how light interacts with mater. Light can be reflected from smooth, flat surfaces, refracted as it passes between media with differing indices of refraction, dispersed into component colors when the refractive index of a medium, and hence the speed at which light travels in the material, depends on the wavelength of the light, and polarized with the electric field restricted to a specific orientation in space. Reflection and Refraction Reflection is the simplest of these phenomena. For surfaces that are smooth and flat on a scale size of the wavelength of light, specular (mirror) reflection obeys the simple relation that the angle of incidence equals the angle of reflection for the incident and reflected rays of light, where both angles are defined relative to the normal of the interface. Specular reflection is the simplest process that can produce an image of objects from which the light originates. Diffuse reflection directs the reflected light in random directions and does not form images. Most generally, light is both reflected and refracted at the interface between two optically transparent media. The incident and refracted rays obey Snell’s Law which states that the index of refraction times the sine of the incident angle in medium a equals the product of the index of 3 refraction and the sine of the refracted angle in medium b. Both specular reflection and refraction are summarized below a r (Specular Reflection) na sin a nb sin b (Snell's Law of Refraction) Note that angles are defined from the normal to the reflecting/refracting surface. A ray of light passing from a lower index of refraction to a higher index of refraction is bent toward the normal. When passing from a higher to a lower refractive index, the light ray is bent away from the normal. For b above a critical value c , light traveling from a higher index medium to a lower index medium can undergo total internal reflection. For internally reflected light there is no refracted ray transmitted across the interface between the two media. At the critical angle the refracted ray is transmitted at a 2 (90) along the interface between the two media. Applying Snell’s Law at the critical angle na sin 2 na n b nb sin c c sin 1 Snorklers and scuba divers are familiar with total internal reflection, which makes the surface of the water above appear as a sliver mirror for glancing lines of sight to the surface. Fiber optic wave guides also employ this effect. A lower index outer layer of the fiber surrounds the inner fiber made of a higher index material. Light signals can be 4 propagated down the fiber without losses at the surface of the inner fiber despite many reflections at the boundary between the two materials. Dispersion The refractive index in most materials is actually a function of the wavelength of the light traveling through the medium. The dependence of the refractive index on wavelength is called dispersion. Dispersion can occur for electromagnetic radiation other than visible light. Radio waves traveling through a plasma of charged particles in the upper regions of the earth’s atmosphere also undergo dispersion, with different wavelengths traveling at different speeds. The most familiar demonstration of dispersion is the separation of white light into its component colors by a glass prism. The wavelength of light traveling within a refracting medium is 0 n where 0 is the wavelength of the light in vacuum. For most media, n decreases with increasing wavelength (decreasing frequency) and increases with decreasing wavelength (increasing frequency), so violet light (small wavelength, high frequency) deviates most (is bent most toward the normal) when entering a higher index medium. Red light (long wavelength, low frequency) is deviated the least. Many of the lovely color effects achieved by cut ornaments and gemstones such as 5 diamonds are due to the dispersion of the incident light into its component colors. Polarization The solutions we have studied for traveling electromagnetic waves are linearly polarized, with the electric and magnetic fields each oriented in a constant direction as the wave propagates through space E x, t Emax cos(kx t ) yˆ B x, t Bmax cos(kx t ) zˆ This wave solution is said to be polarized in the y direction, since the electric field points in the ŷ direction. By convention, it is the orientation of the electric field that determines the polarization direction for a linearly polarized electromagnetic wave. It is possible to produce linearly polarized light by passing unpolarized light through a polarizing filter as shown below Some natural substances, such as the crystal mineral calcite, act as polarizing filters. In fact, calcite (crystalline CaCO3) also exhibits birefringence, with a different index of refraction for different polarization directions. Artificial polarizing filters can also be made by depositing special molecules on transparent plastic. Polarized sunglasses are made in this way. If white light of intensity I is passed through a polarizer, the emerging linearly polarized light has an 6 intensity of I/2. If this light is then passed through a second polarizer (called an analyzer) with its polarizing axis at an angle φ relative to the initial polarizer, the emerging light will have intensity I I max cos2 (Malus's Law) where Imax is the intensity when the cosine of φ is one, that is, when the polarizer and analyzer have their polarizing axes aligned. Linearly polarized light can also be produced by reflection. When light is reflected and refracted at the surface of a higher index medium (such as the surface of a body of water) the reflected light will be linearly polarized parallel to the reflecting surface when the reflected and refracted rays at the surface form a 90 degree angle Applying Snell’s Law to this special case we find na sin a nb sin b na sin p nb sin( tan p nb na 2 p ) nb cos p (Brewster's Law) where θp is called the polarizing angle. The polarizing angle is sometimes referred to as the Brewster angle or Brewster’s angle. 7 The phenomenon of linearly polarized light produced by reflection from horizontal surfaces was a prime motivation in the development of polarized sunglasses, where the lenses are polarizing filters. The unwanted glare from the horizontally polarized light reflected from a horizontal surface (such as the surface of a body of water) can be eliminated by orienting the polarizing axis of the lenses vertically, to eliminate the horizontally polarized component of the light reaching the eyes. 8