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Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001 Philip M. Dauber

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Page 1: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Light Ray, Light Ray

A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction

(aka Geometric optics)

No Light, No Sight

Presentation Text ©2001 Philip M. Dauber

Page 2: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

What is Light?

• Electromagnetic Radiation with wavelength

(visible) 400 to 700 nm (nanometers) or 4x10-7 to 7x10-7 meters

• Travels in straight lines

• Bounces (reflects) off certain materials

• Refracts (bends) in transparent materials

• Travels at c = 3 x 108 m/sec (in vacuum)

Page 3: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Reflection

• Light bounces off objects

• Consider “rays” – light moving in straight line

• Law of reflection: angle of incidence = angle of reflection

Page 4: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Law of Reflection

Page 5: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Law of Reflection i = r

• I - incident ray

• R - reflected ray

• N – normal

• Theta-I is angle of

incidence

• Theta –R is angle of

reflection

Page 6: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Types of Reflection

Page 7: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

How Plane Mirror Forms Image

Page 8: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Image From Plane Mirror

• Virtual

• Behind mirror

• Right side up(upright)

• Left-right reversed

• Located equal

Distance behind mirror

• Same size as object

Page 9: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Distance RelationshipImage is as far behind mirror as object is in

front

Page 10: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

How Curved Mirror Forms Real Images

Page 11: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

How Law of Reflection Leads to Images from Spherical Mirror

• C is center of

curvature

• F is focal point

• Real image will

be located on same side

of mirror as object

Page 12: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Rules of Reflection – Two “Special” Rays

• An incident ray parallel to principal axis will pass through the focal point after reflection.

• An incident ray passing through the focal point will leave mirror parallel to principal axis

Page 13: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

What’s So “Special?” About Special Rays?

• Its easy to predict where they will go

• Use Law of Reflection

Page 14: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Ray Diagram – Object Beyond C = 2f

• Real image

• Inverted

• Smaller than object

• Note use of two

“special” rays

• What is another?

Page 15: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Ray Diagram – Object at C = 2f or between f and 2f

• Image inverted• Located at 2f • Same size as object

• Image inverted• Further than 2f• Larger than object

Page 16: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Object at 2f

Page 17: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Object Between f and 2f

Page 18: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Object Closer to Mirror Than f “Shaving Mirror” Case

• Image virtual

• Behind mirror

• Upright

• Larger than object

Page 19: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Object at f

• Must use different ray (goes to intersection of principal axis and mirror)

• No image formed

Page 20: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Object Closer to Mirror Than F

Page 21: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Mirror Equation

• f is positive for concave mirror

Question: Where will image formed by a lens with 20 cm focal length be if object is placed 30 cm from mirror?

Page 22: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

How Big is The Image?

• M is magnification

• - sign means image is inverted

Question: If the object in the question on previous slide is 2 cm high, how high is image?

Page 23: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Convex (Diverging) Mirrors

• f is negative

• Light rays spread,

not focused; images virtual

• 7-11 mirror foils

thieves

Page 24: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Ray Diagram for Convex Mirror

• One ray parallel to p.a.

• Second ray heads for

focus behind mirror

• Diverging rays must be

extended behind mirror

(dotted lines)

• Image virtual, upright, smaller

Page 25: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Why Are Some Rearview Mirrors Convex?

Page 26: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Problem

• A 1.6 m tall thief stands 10m away from a 7-11 mirror with 2m (negative) focal length.

Where is the image and how tall is it?• Use

• Note: negative di means image behind mirror

Page 27: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Index of Refraction

• Light slows down in transparent materials other than vacuum(like car slows in sand)

• v = c/n velocity of light in medium

• n is called index of refraction

• n = about 1.5 for glass

• n = 1.33 for water

Page 28: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Index of Refraction

• Ratio of speed of light in vacuum to speed of light in material

• n = c/v = 3.0 x 108 m/s/v• n always greater than one

Page 29: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Refraction: How Much Does It Bend?

• Angle of incidence i

• Angle of refraction r

• Snell’s Law:

ni sin i = nr sin r

Page 30: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Helpful Analogy:The Band of Sand

• What happens when the car drives into the sand?

highway sand

Which way does the car turn?

Page 31: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Toward and Away from Normal

• When light enters a more dense (greater n) medium, it bends toward the normal

• When light enters a less dense (smaller n) medium, it bends away from the normal

Page 32: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Mysteries?

• Why do a person’s legs appear shorter when they are standing in water?

• Why Does A Glass Rod Disappear in Mineral Oil?

Page 33: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Problem

• Light strikes a flat piece of glass(n = 1.5) at 60 degrees to the normal. What is the angle of the light in the glass?

i = 60o

r

Page 34: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Solution

• ni sin i = nr sin r

• ni = 1 nr = 1.5

sin r = 1.00/1.50 sin i = 0.577

r = 35.2o

Page 35: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Critical Angle• Light ray leaves more dense medium

• Angle of refraction approaches 900

• Past critical angle there is no refracted ray

Page 36: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Critical AngleThe angle of incidence past which there is no

refracted ray

• ni sin i = nr sin r

• sin c = nr/ni sin900 = nr/ni

• If ray emerges into air• sin c = 1/ni

c

Page 37: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Example

• What is the critical angle for light rays leaving a swimming pool? What does the world look like to a swimmer at the bottom of the pool?

Sin c = 1.00/1.33 = 0.750

c = 490

Swimmer sees outside world compressed into a circle whose edge makes a 49 degree angle to the vertical

Page 38: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Total Internal Reflection

Page 39: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Applications of TIR

• Prisms in Binoculars, Periscopes

Page 40: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Dispersion• Separation of white light into spectrum of

wavelengths (colors)

Page 41: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Why Dispersion Occurs

• Index of refraction, n, depends on wavelength

• Typically n decreases as increases

• Exit angle from prism depends on

White light

Page 42: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Forming a Rainbow

Page 43: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Fiber Optics

• Fiber Optic Amplifier Module

                                                                                                 

Spy under door optics

                                                           

endoscopePhotos courtesy JDS Uniphase Inc.

Page 44: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Lenses

• Lenses can focus or diverge light

• Act like tiny prisms

Page 45: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Thin Lens

• Convex lenses have two focal points

Page 46: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Focal Length of Lens

• That distance, f, from lens at which parallel rays are brought to a point

• Power of a lens:

P = 1/f

• Unit is “diopter” (m-1)

• Used by optometrists

Focal point

Page 47: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Three Special, Predictable Rays

• Avoid application of Snell’s Law

• Parallel to principal axis, exiting rays goes through far focus

• Through near side focus; exiting ray parallel

• Through center of lens (no refraction)

Page 48: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Object Distance Greater than 2f

• Image real

• Inverted

• Smaller

• Opposite side

from object

• Like camera

Page 49: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Object at 2f or between f and 2f

• Image same size, real• At 2f

• Image larger, real• Greater than 2f• Like projector

Page 50: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Diverging Lens – Does NOT focus

• Image virtual

• Upright

• Smaller

• Same side

as object

• Closer than f

Page 51: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Thin Lens Equation

• F positive for converging lens, negative for diverging lens

• di positive for real images, negative for virtual images (same side)

Page 52: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Magnification

• Relates image and object height to image and object distance

Page 53: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Solving Lens Problems

• Read and re-read problem• Draw ray diagram with 2 or 3 special rays• Solve lens and magnification equations for

unknowns• Follow sign conventions including

– f positive for converging lenses– f negative for diverging lenses– di negative on same side of lens as object

Page 54: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Lens Problem

• A fly one cm tall is 30 cm from a lens with a focal length of 20cm. Where is the (real) image of the fly located and how tall is it?

1/di = 1/f – 1/d0 = 1/20 – 1/30 = 3/60 – 2/60 = 1/60

di = 60 cm on other side of lens from fly

hi = -h0 di/d0 = -2cm

- sign means image inverted

Page 55: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Object Inside of f – Magnifying Glass

• Image virtual

• Upright

• Same side as object,

behind object

• larger

Page 56: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Problem

• An object is placed 10 cm from a 15cm focal length converging lens. Where is the image?

1/di = 1/f – 1/d0 = 1/15 – 1/10 = -1/30

di = -30 cm

- sign means image is virtual and n same side of lens as object

Page 57: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Object at f

• No image formed

Page 58: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Diverging Lens Problems

• Remember, f is negative

• di will also be negative

Page 59: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Problem

• Where must a small insect be placed if a 25 cm diverging lens is to form a virtual image 20 cm in front of the lens?

1/d0 = 1/f – 1/di = -1/25 + 1/20 =

(-4+5)/100 = 1/100

d0 = 100 cm in front of lens

Page 60: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Combinations of Lenses and Lenses with Mirrors

• The image produced by the first element becomes the object of the second

• Two converging lenses with focal lengths 20.0 and 25.0 cm respectively are placed 80.0 cm apart. An object is placed 60 cm in front of the first lens. Where is the image?

Page 61: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Lenses and Mirrors

• Sketch a ray diagram of a set up in which a mirror and a lens work together

• Find out how an astronomical telescope works– Refracting– Reflecting

• Find out how a simple compound (two lens) microscope works

Page 62: Light Ray, Light Ray A Cruise Through the Wonderful World of Reflection and Refraction (aka Geometric optics) No Light, No Sight Presentation Text ©2001

Acknowledgements

• Graphics and animation courtesy of Tom Henderson, Glenbrook South High School, Illinois

• Photos of fiber optic components courtesy of JDS Uniphase, Inc