refraction refraction and snell’s law critical angle total internal reflection fiber optics...
TRANSCRIPT
Refraction
•Refraction and Snell’s Law
• Critical angle
• Total internal reflection
• Fiber optics
• Mirages & Rainbows
• Prisms
Speed of Light & Refraction
light travels at 3.0 108 m/s in a vacuum. Light is slowed down by the presence of matter. Light travels at about 3/4 of its vacuum speed (0.75 c ) in water and about 2/3 its vacuum speed (0.67 c ) in glass. The slowing occurs when light strikes an atom and interacts with its electron cloud.
Refraction
When light travels from one medium to another, and the speeds in these media differ, it refracts or changes direction at the interface.
Reflection & Refraction
At an interface between two media, both reflection and refraction can occur. The angles of incidence, reflection, and refraction are all measured with respect to the normal. The angles of incidence and reflection are always the same.
Refraction If light speeds up upon entering a new medium, the angle of refraction, r , will be greater than the angle of incidence.
Index of Refraction, n
The index of refraction of a substance is the ratio of the speed in light in a vacuum to the speed of light in that substance:
n = Index of Refraction
c = Speed of light in vacuum
v = Speed of light in medium
n =c v
Index of Refraction, n
Note that a large index of refraction corresponds to a relatively slow light speed in that medium.
Medium
Vacuum
Air (STP)
Water (20º C)
Ethanol
Crown Glass
Diamond
n
1
1.00029
1.33
1.36
~1.5
2.42
Snell’s LawSnell’s law states that a ray of light bends so that the ratio of the sine of the angle of incidence to the sine of the angle of refraction is constant.
ni sin i = nr sinr
Here ni is the index of refraction in the original medium and nr is the index in the medium the light enters. i and r are the angles of incidence and refraction, respectively.
i
r
ni
nr
Willebrord Snell
Snell’s Law Derivation Two parallel rays are shown. Points A and B are directly opposite one another. The top pair is at one point in time, and the bottom pair after time t. The dashed lines connecting the pairs are wave fronts. In time t, point A travels a distance x, while point B travels a distance y.
sin1 = x / d, so x = d sin1
sin2 = y / d, so y = d sin2
Speed of A: v1 = x / t
Speed of B: v2 = y / tContinued…
•
•••
A
A B
B
1
2
x
yd
n1
n2
Snell’s Law Derivation
v1 / c sin1 1 / n1 sin1 n2
v2 / c sin2 1 / n2 sin2 n1 = = =
n1 sin1 = n2 sin2
v1 x / t x sin1=
v2 y / t y sin2
= = So,
•
•••
A
A B
B
1
2
x
yd
n1
n2
Refraction Problem #1
Glass, n2 = 1.5
Air, n1 = 1
30°
øHoriz. ray, parallel to base
Goal: Find the angular displacement of the ray after having passed through the prism. Hints:
Refraction Problem #1
1. Find the first angle of refraction using Snell’s law.
2. Find angle ø. (Hint: Use Geometry skills.)
3. Find the second angle of incidence.
4. Find the second angle of refraction, , using Snell’s Law
19.4712º
Glass, n2 = 1.5
Air, n1 = 1
30°
ø
79.4712º
10.5288º
Horiz. ray, parallel to base
15.9º
Goal: Find the angular displacement of the ray after having passed through the prism. Hints:
Refraction Problem #2
120º
d
glass
H20
H20
10m
n1 = 1.3
n2 = 1.5
Goal: Find the distance the light ray displaced due to the thick window and how much time it spends in the glass. Some hints are given.
Refraction Problem #2
120º
d
glass
H20
H20
10m
20º
20º
0.504 m
5.2 · 10-8 s
26.4º
n1 = 1.3
n2 = 1.5
Goal: Find the distance the light ray displaced due to the thick window and how much time it spends in the glass. Some hints are given.
1. Find 1 (just for fun).
2. To show incoming & outgoing rays are parallel, find .
3. Find d.
4. Find the time the light spends in the glass.
Extra practice: Find if bottom medium is replaced with air.
Refraction Problem #3Goal: Find the exit angle relative to the horizontal.
19.8°
= ?
36°
glass
air
The triangle is isosceles.Incident ray is horizontal, parallel to the base.
=
Critical AngleThe incident angle that causes the refracted ray to skim right along the boundary of a less optically dense substance is known as the critical angle, c. The critical angle is the angle of incidence that produces an angle of refraction of 90º. If the angle of incidence exceeds the critical angle, the ray is completely internally reflected.
ni
nr
c
less optically dense substance
more optically dense substance
Critical Angle
c = sin-1nr
ni
ni
nr
c
From Snell, n1 sinc = n2 sin 90
Since sin 90 = 1, we
have n1 sinc = n2 and
the critical angle is
Critical Angle Sample Problem
Calculate the critical angle for the diamond-air boundary.
c = sin-1 (nr / ni)
= sin-1 (1 / 2.42)
= 24.4Any light shone on this
boundary beyond this angle will be reflected back into the
diamond.
c
air
diamond
Refer to the Index of Refraction chart for the information.
Total Internal Reflection
Total internal reflection occurs when light is traveling from a more optically dense medium to a less optically dense medium at an angle greater than the critical angle. When this occurs there is no refraction, only reflection.
n1
n2 > c
n1n2 >
Fiber Optics
Fiber optic lines are strands of glass or transparent fibers that allows the transmission of light and digital information over long distances. They are used for the telephone system, the cable TV system, the internet, medical imaging, and mechanical engineering inspection.
A fiber optic wire
spool of optical fiber
Continued…
Fiber Optics Light travels through the core of a fiber optic cable by continually reflecting off of the cladding. Due to total internal reflection, the cladding does not absorb any of the light, allowing the light to travel over great distances.
• Single-mode fibers- transmit one signal per fiber (used in cable TV and telephones). • Multi-mode fibers- transmit multiple signals per fiber (used in computer networks).
Types of optical fibers: Fiber Optics
Optical fibers have many advantages over copper wires. They are less expensive, thinner, lightweight, and more flexible. They aren’t flammable since they use light signals instead of electric signals. Light signals from one fiber do not interfere with signals in nearby fibers, which means clearer TV reception or phone conversations.
Fiber OpticsFiber optics are long thin strands of very pure glass. Hundreds to thousands of them are arranged in bundles (optical cables). There are three main parts to an optical fiber:
• Core- the thin glass center where light travels. • Cladding- optical material (with a lower index of refraction than the core) that surrounds the core that reflects light back into the core. • Buffer Coating- plastic coating on the outside of an optical fiber to protect it from damage.
MiragesMirages are caused by the refracting properties of a non-uniform atmosphere.
Several examples of mirages include seeing “puddles” ahead on a hot highway or in a desert and the lingering daylight after the sun is below the horizon.
Inferior MiragesA person sees a puddle ahead on the hot highway because the road heats the air above it, while the air farther above the road stays cool. The “puddle” is really just an inverted image of the sky above.
Instead of just two layers, hot and cool, there are really many layers, each slightly hotter than the layer above it. The cooler air has a slightly higher index of refraction than the warm air beneath it. Rays of light coming toward the road gradually refract further from the normal, more parallel to the road. When a ray is bent enough, it surpasses the critical angle and reflects. The ray continues to refract as it heads toward the observer. This is an example of an inferior mirage, since the cool are is above the hot air.
Inferior Mirages
Superior MiragesSuperior mirages occur when a layer of cool air is beneath a layer of warm air. Light rays are bent downward, which can make an object seem to be higher in the air and inverted. When the critical angle is exceeded the ray reflects. These mirages usually occur over ice, snow, or cold water. Sometimes superior images are produced without reflection.
ObserverApparent position of sun
Earth
Actual position of sunAtmosphere
Daylight after the sun is below the horizon or before the sun rises is another effect of refraction. Light travels at a slightly slower speed in Earth’s atmosphere than in space. As a result, sunlight is refracted by the atmosphere.
Sunlight after Sunset
Note: the picture greatly exaggerates this effect as well as the thickness of the atmosphere.
Dispersion of LightDispersion is the separation of light into a spectrum by refraction. The index of refraction is actually a function of wavelength. For longer wavelengths the index is slightly small. Thus, red light refracts less than violet.
(The picture is exaggerated.)
This effect causes white light to split into it spectrum of colors. Red light travels the fastest in glass, has a smaller index of refraction, and bends the least. Violet is slowed down the most, has the largest index, and bends the most. In other words: the higher the frequency, the greater the bending.
Dispersion of Light
There are many natural occurrences of light optics in our atmosphere. One of the most common of these is the rainbow, which is caused by water droplets dispersing sunlight. Others include arcs, halos, cloud iridescence.
Atmospheric Optics
Rainbows A rainbow is a spectrum formed when sunlight is dispersed by water droplets in the atmosphere. Sunlight incident on a water droplet is refracted. Because of dispersion, each color is refracted at a slightly different angle. At the back surface of the droplet, the light undergoes total internal reflection. On the way out of the droplet, the light is once more refracted and dispersed.
Although each droplet produces a complete spectrum, an observer will only see a certain wavelength of light from each droplet. (The wavelength depends on the relative positions of the sun, droplet, and observer.) Because there are millions of droplets in the sky, a complete spectrum is seen. The droplets reflecting red light make an angle of 42o with respect to the direction of the sun’s rays; the droplets reflecting violet light make an angle of 40o.
Rainbows
Secondary RainbowThe secondary rainbow is a rainbow of radius 51, occasionally visible outside the primary rainbow. It is produced when the light entering a cloud droplet is reflected twice internally and then exits the droplet. The color spectrum is reversed in respect to the primary rainbow, with red appearing on its inner edge.
Primary
Secondary
Alexander’s dark region
CreditsSnork pics: http://www.geocities.com/EnchantedForest/Cottage/7352/indosnor.htmlSnorks icons: http://www.iconarchive.com/icon/cartoon/snorks_by_pino/Snork seahorse pic: http://members.aol.com/discopanth/private/snork.jpgMirror, Lens, and Eye pics:http://www.physicsclassroom.com/ Refracting Telescope pic: http://csep10.phys.utk.edu/astr162/lect/light/refracting.html Reflecting Telescope pic: http://csep10.phys.utk.edu/astr162/lect/light/reflecting.html Fiber Optics: http://www.howstuffworks.com/fiber-optic.htm
Willebrord Snell and Christiaan Huygens pics: http://micro.magnet.fsu.edu/optics/timeline/people/snell.html Chromatic Aberrations: http://www.dpreview.com/learn/Glossary/Optical/Chromatic_Aberrations_01.htm Mirage Diagrams: http://www.islandnet.com/~see/weather/elements/mirage1.htm Sir David Brewster pic: http://www.brewstersociety.com/brewster_bio.html Mirage pics: http://www.polarimage.fi/ http://www.greatestplaces.org/mirage/desert1.html http://www.ac-grenoble.fr/college.ugine/physique/les%20mirages.htmlDiffuse reflection: http://www.glenbrook.k12.il.us/gbssci/phys/Class/refln/u13l1d.htmlDiffraction: http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/phyopt/grating.html
Supernumerary Arcs
Supernumerary arcs are faint arcs of color just inside the primary rainbow. They occur when the drops are of uniform size. If two light rays in a raindrop are scattered in the same direction but have take different paths within the drop, then they could interfere with each other constructively or destructively. The type of interference that occurs depends on the difference in distance traveled by the rays. If that difference is nearly zero or a multiple of the wavelength, it is constructive, and that color is reinforced. If the difference is close to half a wavelength, there is destructive interference.
The Brewster angle is the angle of incidence the produces reflected and refracted rays that are perpendicular.
Brewster Angle
From Snell, n1 sinb = n2 sin.
α = b since + = 90º, and b + = 90º.
β = since + = 90º, and + = 90º. Thus,
n1 sinb = n2 sin = n2 sin = n2 cosb
tanb = n2 / n1
b b
n2
n1
Sir David Brewster