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Light. Chapter 16. Mission. In this presentation, we will do the following: define light. tell how light is measured. tell how light travels. explain the electromagnetic spectrum. tell how light is transferred. tell how colors are formed.
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Light Chapter 16
Mission In this presentation, we will do the following: • define light. • tell how light is measured. • tell how light travels. • explain the electromagnetic spectrum. • tell how light is transferred. • tell how colors are formed. • tell some applications of light in industry and everyday life.
16.1 Light Fundamentals • Light - EM wave (transverse) that human eye can see. • Different light wavelengths are seen as different colors. • Ray - straight line representing path of beam of light. • Ray optics - ray diagrams to study travel of light.
EM Spectrum The electromagnetic spectrum includes, from longest to shortest: • radio waves • microwaves • infrared • Visible light • ultraviolet • X-rays • gamma-rays
Transference of Light • Can be reflected, absorbed, refracted, transmitted. • To be black, all wavelengths of light hitting that object are absorbed; no light is reflected. • Solid objects, for the most part, will reflect light. • Transparent objects will transmit light through them.
The Speed of Light • Galileo - 1st to say that light had finite speed • Ole Roemer - 1st to take data from which speed of light could be measured • A. A. Michelson - 1st American to win Nobel prize measured speed of light
Use of laser allows for new way of measuring speed of light. • Speed of light, c, is 299,792,458 m/s or c = 3.00E8 m/s • Prac Pr 376
Sources of Light • Luminous - emits light • Ex: sun, incandescent light bulb. • Illuminated - reflects light • Ex: moon • Luminous flux, P - rate at which light is emitted. • Unit is lumen, lm • Illuminance, E - illumination of a surface.
Measurement of light depends on sensitivity of eye. • Candela, cd - measure of luminous intensity which is luminous flux that falls on 1 sq meter of sphere with one meter in radius. • Inverse Square 379 • Ex Prob 380 Prac Pr 381
Inverse Square – varies inversely as square of its distance from a light source. • Fig 16-6 379 • Ex Prob 380 Prac Pr 381
16.2 Light and Matter • Transparent - transmit light waves • Translucent - transmit light waves but objects cannot be seen clearly. • Opaque - absorb or reflect light waves
How We See • Light enters pupil & travels through lens. • Image is focused inverted (upside down) on retina. • Image is transferred to brain by optic nerve.
Color • Red to violet • Spectrum - produced when white light is passed through spectrum. • Primary colors - red, green, & blue • Secondary - magenta, cyan, & yellow
Complementary color - light of color & its complement add to produce white. • Dye - molecule that absorbs certain wavelengths & to transmit or reflect others.
Pigment - larger than molecule. • Mix to form suspensions rather than solutions. • White light can be formed by adding together primary light colors, red, blue, & green.
Subtractive primary colors, cyan, magenta, & yellow, are used in pigments & dyes to produce wide variety of colors.
Colors in soap & oil films are caused by interference of specific colors of light reflected from front & back surfaces of thin film. • Light is polarized if only waves vibrating in particular plane are present.
Fig 16-14 and 15 387 • Light is polarized by scattering in air. • Ray & wave models of light – Particle-Wave Duality of Light
Conclusion • Light is a transverse wave that can be reflected, refracted, diffracted, transmitted, or absorbed. • Light travels through a vacuum. • Speed of light (c) is 3.00 x 108 m/s • Colors are produced additive or subtractive processes.
Works Cited • Physics: Principles & Problems, Glencoe • http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/forces/isq.html • http://acept.asu.edu/PiN/rdg/color/color.shtml • http://sln.fi.edu/color/color.html • http://imagers.gsfc.nasa.gov/ems/waves3.html. • http://www.glenbrook.k12.il.us/gbssci/phys/Class/waves/u10l1c.html • http://www.kettering.edu/~drussell/Demos/waves/wavemotion.html • http://www.physicsclassroom.com/mmedia/optics/lr.html