+ All Categories

Light

Date post: 16-May-2015
Category:
Upload: eliseb
View: 8,078 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
Chapter 27 Hewitt Presentation
Popular Tags:
48
Chapter 16 - 19 Chapter 16 - 19
Transcript
Page 1: Light

Chapter 16 - 19Chapter 16 - 19

Page 2: Light

Socrates and Plato

• 5-6th c. BC

• Light traveled from a person’s eyes to the objects one saw.

Page 3: Light

Pythagorus

• 6th c BC

• Light was made up of particles emitted from the objects.

Page 4: Light

Aristotle

• 4th C. BC

• Light moved as a wave, like ripples on water.

Page 5: Light

Leonardo da Vinci

• 1500’s

• Sound and light had similar properties, so they both were waves.

Page 6: Light

Galileo

• 1564 - 1642 •The first to hypothesize that light had a specific speed.

• Determined that light was too fast to measure due to human reaction time being to slow.

Page 7: Light

Olaus Roemer

• 1644-1710•He was the first to determine that light did travel with a measurable speed.

• It took 22min. to cross a diameter of the Earth’s orbit giving a speed of light of 2.2*10^8m/s1675 was the year of the first demonstration that light travels at a finite speed (a definable number)

Page 8: Light

Newton

• 1642-1727– 1666: colors produced when a beam of

sunlight passes through a prism is called a spectrum. White light is made up of colors.

– Light moved as a stream of particles, accounting for refraction, reflection, and color.

– Wrote a book called “Optiks”

Page 9: Light

Christian Huygens

• 1629-1695

• Calculated the speed of light to be 2.3 x 108 m/s. Error was based on the time estimate, which was limited by equipment.

• His work was rejected by fellow scientists as being too large.

Page 10: Light

Christian Huygens

•  1629-1695

• Proposed that wave theory also explained light’s properties.

Page 11: Light

Thomas Young

• 1773-1829

• Light exhibited interference, which is NOT accountable by the particle theory.

Page 12: Light

Augustin Fresnel

• 1788-1827

• Proposed a comprehensive mathematical wave theory which accounted for all observable behaviors of light.

Page 13: Light

James Clerk Maxwell

• 1831-1879• Light is a wave produced

when electric forces accelerate charge particles within atoms.

• Called electromagnetic radiation.

• He was able to predict the speed of light.

Page 14: Light

Albert Michelson

• 1852-1931

• In 1905 he precisely measured the speed of light using the Michelson-Morley apparatus.

• The speed of light is equal to the product of its frequency and wavelength.

• The speed of light: c = 3 x 108

Page 15: Light

PRESENT 

• Neither the wave model nor the particle model alone can explain all of the properties and behaviors of light. The present theory unifies the wave and particle natures of light.

Page 16: Light

The Nature of Light

• Wave model of light: light behaves as a wave, showing properties of reflection, refraction, diffraction, and interference.

• Particle model of light: light behaves as a particle, showing properties of reflection and refraction.

Page 17: Light

Electromagnetic Radiation

Light is a member of a large family of radiating waves.

The result of the acceleration of charged particles. They can travel through empty space. Visible light is only one type of electromagnetic wave.

The entire range is called the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Page 18: Light

The Electromagnetic Spectrum

• Is the entire range of electromagnetic waves, roughly divided into regions by how wavelengths interact with matter.

• All travel at 3 x 108 m/s. • Frequency ranges from 101 to 1025 Hz.• Visible light is small portion at about 1015 Hz, 10-

7m.

Page 19: Light

• wavelengths from 400nm to 700nm• shortest are seen as violet light• longest are seen as red light• travels in a straight line

Light is the range of frequencies of electromagnetic waves that stimulates

the retina of the eye.

Page 20: Light

Energy and Electromagnetic Waves

The energy of electromagnetic waves depends on wavelength.

In the standard wave model, energy depends on amplitude. For electromagnetic waves, the shorter the wavelength(l), the greater its energy.

Page 21: Light

Types of Electromagnetic Waves

Gamma rays – Have the shortest wavelength and the greatest energy (wavelengths of gamma rays are shorter than the width of an atom) These are used to destroy cancer cells.

X rays – penetrate all but the very dense part of the body.

Page 22: Light

Types of Electromagnetic Waves

Ultraviolet light – sun/sunlight/tanning beds. Sunburns occur when ultraviolet light damages skin cells.

Visible light – ROYGBIV Shortest wavelength is violet, longest wavelength is Red.

White light – A mixture of all visible colors of the spectrum.

Page 23: Light

Types of Electromagnetic Waves

Infrared light – Wavelengths longer than visible light. Responsible for warming the earth and heat.

Microwaves.

Radio waves – longest wavelengths of the electromagnetic spectrum.

Page 24: Light

Medium

Light travels in a vacuum.

No transmitting medium is necessary, but if a medium is present, it may pass through that as well. 

Page 25: Light

Speed of Light (c) = λf

What is the frequency of yellow light, λ = 556nm?

f = c / λ

= 3 x 10^8 m/s .Convert nmm 556 x 10^-9 m

= 5.4 x 10^14 Hz

c = 3.00 x 10^8 m/s

Page 26: Light

The Speed of Light

• The speed of light is dependent on the medium through which light travels

• The speed of light determines the wavelength. 

Page 27: Light

Fun Facts about the speed of light. 

Light is so fast that if a beam of light could travel around the earth it would take 7.5 trips in 1 second.

It takes 8 minutes for light from the sun to reach our eyes.

It takes 4 years for light from the star Alpha Centauri (nearest star next to the sun) to reach earth.

A light year is the distance light travels in 1 year.

Page 28: Light

• A ray is a straight line that represents the path of a very narrow beam of light

Represented by a solid line with an arrow indicating direction of motion 

Page 29: Light

A BEAM

• A beam is a collection of rays.

Page 30: Light

• A luminous body emits light waves.

• A illuminated body reflects waves.

• An incandescent lamp (light bulb) is luminous because electrical energy heats a thin tungsten wire in the bulb and causes it to glow.

Page 31: Light

Luminous Vs. Illuminated

Luminous objects are themselves a source of light.

Illuminated objects are visible only when light reflects off of them.

Page 32: Light

• Luminous Flux (P) is the flow of light from source measured in lumens (lm).

• Illuminance (E) is the rate at which electromagnetic wave energy falls on a surface (illumination surface).

• Measured in lumens per square meter, lm/m², or lux (lx).

• A candela (cd) is a unit of luminous intensity.

• The candela is the official SI unit from which all-light intensity units are calculated.

Page 33: Light

E (illumination) = P (luminous flux) 4Пd²(distance)

Light Illuminance varies as the inverse square of the distance.

Illumination drops off quickly with distance from source.

Page 34: Light

Light and Matter

• Light that shines upon materials can be reflected, absorbed, or transmitted.

• Materials are classified as transparent, translucent, or opaque.

• This depends on the material.

Page 35: Light

Transparent, translucent and opaque

• Transparent objects allow light to be fully transmitted.

• Translucent objects allow light to be partially transmitted. Some light is absorbed and/or reflected.

• Opaque objects absorb all light. They cast dark shadows. 

Page 36: Light

SHADOWS

• formed when an object blocks all of the light from a light source.

• have a darker part on the inside called the umbra where all of the light is blocked.

• have a lighter part around the edges called the penumbra. – formed when light from one source is blocked with

light from another source filling in some of the shadow or when light from a broad source is only partially blocked.

Page 37: Light

Examples of Shadows

Page 38: Light

Regions of a Shadow

Page 39: Light

Polarization

Light contains electromagnetic waves vibrating perpendicular to the direction of travel, with half the waves vibrating in the x-y plane, and half in the x-z plane.

Polarizing filter – allows light traveling on the same plane to pass through. All other light waves are absorbed.

EM Wave

Page 40: Light

Polarization

Placing a polarizing filter in a beam of light will reduce the intensity by ½, as the filter only allows the waves vibrating in the same direction to pass.

Placing a second filter perpendicular to the first will eliminate all of the light.

For this reason, polarized sunglasses can help reduce glare.

Page 41: Light

Are the horizontal lines parallel or do they slope?

Page 42: Light

Can you see the three faces?

Page 43: Light

How many legs does this elephant have?

Page 44: Light

What does the sign say? Are you sure?

Page 45: Light

3D Viewing

• The glasses have two Polaroid filters. Each filter has a different polarization axis - one is horizontal and the other is vertical. There are two projectors also having two different polarizing filters. The result of this arrangement of projectors and filters, is that the left eye sees the movie which is projected from the right projector while the right eye sees the movie which is projected from the left projector. This gives the viewer a perception of depth.

Page 46: Light

View with 3D Glasses

Page 47: Light

View with 3D Glasses

Page 48: Light

View with 3D Glasses


Recommended