1 / 27

Reflection and Refraction of Light

Physics 102: Lecture 17. Reflection and Refraction of Light. q i. q r. Last Time. Today. q 1. n 1. n 2. q 2. Recall from last time…. Reflection:. q i = q r. Flat Mirror: image equidistant behind. Spherical Mirrors: Concave or Convex. Refraction:.

genevan
Download Presentation

Reflection and Refraction of Light

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Physics 102: Lecture 17 Reflection and Refraction of Light

  2. qi qr Last Time Today q1 n1 n2 q2 Recall from last time…. Reflection: qi = qr Flat Mirror: image equidistant behind Spherical Mirrors: Concave or Convex Refraction: n1 sin(q1)= n2 sin(q2)

  3. #1 #2 #3 I Concave Mirror Principal Rays 1) Parallel to principal axis reflects through f. 2) Through f, reflects parallel to principal axis. 3) Through center. O f c Image is (in this case): Real (light rays actually cross) Inverted (Arrow points opposite direction) Reduced (smaller than object) **Every other ray from object tip which hits mirror will reflect through image tip

  4. Preflight 17.1 Which ray is NOT correct? p.a. 1) C f 2) 3)

  5. Mirror Equation do f I di Works for concave, convex, or flat O c • do = distance object is from mirror: • Positive: object in front of mirror • Negative: object behind mirror • di = distance image is from mirror: • Positive: real image (in front of mirror) • Negative: virtual image (behind mirror) • f = focal length mirror: • Positive: concave mirror +R/2 • Negative: convex mirror –R/2

  6. Preflight 17.3 The image produced by a concave mirror of a real object is: • Always Real • Always Virtual • Sometimes Real, Sometimes Virtual

  7. ACT: Concave Mirror Where in front of a concave mirror should you place an object so that the image is virtual? • Close to mirror • Far from mirror • Either close or far • Not Possible

  8. Magnification Equation q do do q Angle of incidence I di ho q di hi q Angle of reflection O • ho = height of object: • Positive: always • hi = height of image: • Positive: image is upright • Negative: image is inverted • m = magnification: • Positive / Negative: same as for hi • < 1: image is reduced • > 1: image is enlarged 25

  9. Preflight 17.2 Compared to the candle, the image will be: • Larger • Smaller • Same Size Example Solving Equations A candle is placed 6 cm in front of a concave mirror with focal length f=2 cm. Determine the image location. p.a. C f

  10. ACT: Magnification A 4 inch arrow pointing down is placed in front of a mirror that creates an image with a magnification of –2. • What is the size of the image? • 2 inches • 4 inches • 8 inches 4 inches • What direction will the image arrow point? • Up 2) Down

  11. C C C F F F Object Image Image Object Object Image 3 Cases for Concave Mirrors Upright Enlarged Virtual Inside F Inverted Enlarged Real Between C&F Inverted Reduced Real Past C

  12. f image object • Demo: • two identical spherical mirrors • each mirror is positioned at the focal point of the other

  13. #1 I #2 #3 Convex Mirror Rays 1) Parallel to principal axis reflects through f. 2) Through f, reflects parallel to principal axis. 3) Through center. O f c Image is: Virtual (light rays don’t really cross) Upright (same direction as object) Reduced (smaller than object) (always true for convex mirrors!):

  14. Example Solving Equations A candle is placed 6 cm in front of a convex mirror with focal length f=-3 cm. Determine the image location. Determine the magnification of the candle. If the candle is 9 cm tall, how tall does the image candle appear to be?

  15. Preflight 17.4 The image produced by a convex mirror of a real object is • always real • always virtual • sometimes real and sometimes virtual

  16. Mirror Summary • Angle of incidence = Angle of Reflection • Principal Rays • Parallel to P.A.: Reflects through focus • Through focus: Reflects parallel to P.A. • Through center: Reflects back on self • |f| = R/2

  17. Speed of light in vacuum Speed of light in medium Index of refraction Index of Refraction 186,000 miles/second: it’s not just a good idea, it’s the law! so always!

  18. Snell’s Law When light travels from one medium to another the speed changes v=c/n, but the frequency is constant. So the light bends: n1 sin(q1)= n2 sin(q2) Preflight 17.6 n1 q1 1) n1 > n2 2) n1 = n2 3) n1 < n2 q2 n2 Compare n1 to n2.

  19. Example Snell’s Law Practice 1 r Usually, there is both reflection and refraction! A ray of light traveling through the air (n=1) is incident on water (n=1.33). Part of the beam is reflected at an angle qr = 60. The other part of the beam is refracted. What is q2? n1 q2 = n2 normal

  20. Apparent depth: d apparent fish d actual fish Apparent Depth n2 n1

More Related