1 / 57

Light and the Electromagnetic Spectrum

Light and the Electromagnetic Spectrum. Light as Energy. There is much evidence in our world that light is a form of energy. . Electromagnetic Spectrum. Electromagnetic waves include visible light and several other types of waves. Arranged in order, they form the electromagnetic spectrum. .

armen
Download Presentation

Light and the Electromagnetic Spectrum

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. Light and the Electromagnetic Spectrum

  2. Light as Energy There is much evidence in our world that light is a form of energy.

  3. Electromagnetic Spectrum • Electromagnetic waves include visible light and several other types of waves. • Arranged in order, they form the electromagnetic spectrum.

  4. Electromagnetic Spectrum • Waves with shorter wavelengths have higher frequencies and greater energies. • Radio waves are the least energetic; gamma waves are the most energetic.

  5. Radio Waves • used in TV and radio transmissions • used in communications • microwaves

  6. Infrared Waves • produced by the thermal motion of atoms • all matter emits infrared waves • have many commercial uses

  7. Visible Light Waves • narrow band • 3.9 × 1014 to 7.7 × 1014 Hz • λ = 770 nm to 390 nm • deep red to deep violet • a continuous spectrum

  8. Ultraviolet Waves • greater energy and higher frequency than visible light • three levels

  9. X-rays • produced when high-energy electrons strike atoms and suddenly decelerate • penetrate solid matter • medical and industrial diagnostics

  10. Gamma Rays • produced by high-energy changes in subatomic particles • stopped only by very thick or dense materials • high doses can cause damage to living things

  11. Sources and Propagation of Light

  12. Incandescent • Incandescent sources are objects that are heated until they glow. • The frequency and color of the light are related to the object’s temperature.

  13. Gas-Discharge • consist of a sealed glass tube containing a gas and fitted with electrodes • current flowing through the tube generates visible light • type of gas determines color of light

  14. Gas-Discharge • Fluorescent lights emit UV which strikes phosphors on the inside of the glass tube. • Phosphors glow when struck by high-energy EM radiation.

  15. Lasers • light at a single frequency • single, energetic EM wave • extremely intense • many practical uses, but not suitable for area lighting

  16. LED’s • light-emitting diodes • solid-state electronic component that emits monochromatic light when a small potential difference is established across it

  17. LED’s • wide variety of applications • have become practical for illumination • use low power and are very efficient

  18. Cold Light • generate light with minimal heat through chemical reactions • chemiluminescent • bioluminescence—produced by living things • very efficient

  19. The Speed of Light • Many have tried to calculate the speed of light. • Galileo • Ole Rømer • Armand Fizeau • Léon Foucault • Albert Michelson

  20. The Speed of Light • The currently accepted value for the speed of light is exactly 299,792,458 m/s. • We usually round this to 3.00 × 108 m/s. • This is the speed of light in a vacuum (c).

  21. Light Waves • Light travels outward in concentric spherical waves. • Light waves travel at equal speeds through a uniform medium. • plane waves • wave fronts

  22. Light Waves • Huygens’s principle postulates how light waves propagate. • wavelets • envelope

  23. Light Waves Mathematical Description • The magnitude of the electric field strength (E) and the magnitude of the magnetic field vector (B) both act as sine waves. E = Emax sin ωt B = Bmax sin ωt The electric field and the magnetic field are in phase.

  24. Light Waves Mathematical Description • James Clerk Maxwell related electricity, magnetism, and light.

  25. Reflection and Mirrors

  26. Ray Optics • Light can be regarded as a group of rays. • Light travels in reasonably straight lines. • Reflection: light waves change direction

  27. Ray Optics • Diffuse reflection: light waves reflect in random directions • Regular or specular reflection: light waves reflect predictably

  28. Ray Optics • normal = perpendicular • angle of incidence (θi) • angle of reflection (θr)

  29. Ray Optics Law of Reflection • The incoming ray, the normal, and the reflected ray all lie in the same plane. • The angle of incidence equals the angle of reflection.

  30. Albedo • Visible-light albedo is a ratio of the reflected light to the incident light. • All light is reflected: albedo = 1.00 • All light is absorbed: albedo = 0.00

  31. Albedo • geometric albedo: sun is directly behind the observer relative to the observed object • bond albedo: no regard to the position of the sun

  32. Plane Mirrors • The image we “see” in a mirror is called a virtual image. • In a plane mirror, it appears that the left and right sides are reversed.

  33. Plane Mirrors • By using multiple plane mirrors at various angles, we can see multiple images • 90° → 3 images • 60° → 5 images • 45° → 7 images

  34. 360° n = - 1 θ Plane Mirrors • The number of images (n) for a given angle θis determined by this formula:

  35. Curved Mirrors • concave mirrors • convex mirrors • Spherical concave mirrors produce spherical aberration. • not an issue with parabolic mirrors

  36. Concave Mirrors • principal focus or focal point (F) • distance from F to mirror is the focal length (f) • radius of the mirror (R) is important for spherical concave mirrors

  37. Concave Mirrors • center of a spherical mirror (C) is the center of the spherical surface • line through F and C intersects mirror at its vertex (V); called the principal or optical axis

  38. R f = 2 Concave Mirrors • On a spherical concave mirror, the focus (F) is midway between V and C.

  39. Concave Mirrors

  40. Concave Mirrors • object distance (dO) is the distance of the object from the mirror • image distance (dI) is the distance of the image from the mirror

  41. Concave Mirrors • There are six possible cases with the object located on the optical axis. • A real image is one which can be focused on a screen. • “in front of” the mirror

  42. Concave Mirrors • Case 2 (dO > R)

  43. Concave Mirrors • Case 4 (f < dO < R)

  44. Concave Mirrors • Case 3 (dO = R)

  45. Concave Mirrors • Case 1: “infinite” distance from mirror

  46. Concave Mirrors • Case 5 (dO = f)

  47. Concave Mirrors • Case 6 (dO < f)

  48. 1 1 1 + = dO dI f Finding Image Position • The mirror equation: • Distances behind the mirror are assumed to be negative.

  49. HI dI = - HO dO Magnification • For all spherical mirrors, the height of the image (HI) relates to the height of the object (HO) by:

  50. HI m = HO Magnification • The magnification of the image is the absolute value of the image height to the object height:

More Related