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Reflection and Mirrors. The Law of Reflection always applies: “The angle of reflection is equal to the angle of incidence.”. “Plane” Mirrors form virtual images. Virtual : light APPEARS to come from this location, but does not actually start there.
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Reflection and Mirrors The Law of Reflection always applies: “The angle of reflection is equal to the angle of incidence.”
“Plane” Mirrors form virtual images. Virtual: light APPEARS to come from this location, but does not actually start there. The image is the same distance behind the mirror as the object is in front of the mirror. The image is the same size as the object.
If you wish to take a picture of your image while standing 2 meters in front of a plane mirror, for what distance should you set your camera to provide the sharpest focus? Since the image is the same distance BEHIND the mirror as the object is in front of the mirror…. Set the distance for 4 meters
How big does a mirror have to be in order for you to see your entire image?
Concave Mirrors *Form “real”, inverted (upside down) images are formed UNLESS the object is inside the focal length… …Then the images are “virtual” and upright!
Convex Mirrors The image is always smaller, upright, and virtual- an SUV. Used in security cameras and rear-view mirrors in your car. Focal point
Measurements with mirrors f - focal length do – distance from the mirror to the object being observed. di – distance from the mirror to where an image is formed m- magnification- compares the size of the object being observed and the image formed by the mirror.
The Mirror Equation Where f is the focal length, do is the distance from the mirror to the object, and diis the distance from the mirror to the image.
Magnification The magnification provided by a mirror is given by Where hi is the height of the image and ho is the height of the object
Yep, it’s time for you to try one… A concave mirror has a radius of curvature of 15.0 cm. A 1.5 cm tall gummy bear is placed 19.0 cm from the mirror. Where will the image be formed? What is the magnification? How tall is the image? First find the focal length. f = ½ R f = 7.5 cm Now solve for di using the mirror equation. di = 12.39 cm Now, get the magnification, m = -di / do m = - 0.65 it’s negative because the image is inverted. Now for the height of the image: m = hi / ho hi = -0.98 cm
Concave and Convex Lenses Refraction: the change in direction as a wave passes from one medium into another Light REFRACTS as it passes through lenses, forming images. Convex lenses are CONVERGING lenses Concave lenses are DIVERGING lenses
Measurements with lenses f - focal length do – distance from the lens to the object being observed. di – distance from the lens to where an image is formed m- magnification- compares the size of the object being observed and the image formed by the lens.
Convex Lenses The “focal length” will be ½ the “radius of curvature”.
Images formed by Convex lenses If the object is beyond twice the focal length, the image is smaller, inverted, and real- if a piece of paper was placed at the image location, you would see the image on the paper. If the object is placed at exactly twice the focal length, the image will be exactly the same size as the object, inverted, and real If the object is placed exactly at the focal point, the light rays are perfectly parallel, and NO image will be formed! If the object is placed within the focal length, the image will be larger, upright, and VIRTUAL. NO image would appear on a paper screen placed at the image location!
“Virtual” A “virtual” focal point- real light waves would appear to converge at that point, but they actually do not. Concave lenses have a virtual focal point. Convex lenses have a real focal point. A “virtual” image- No real image will appear on a screen. The light rays that reach your eye just behave as if they came from the image position
Magnifying glasses Magnifying glasses are convex lenses that converge the light towards a focal point
Diverging Lenses Concave (diverging) lenses ALWAYS form smaller, upright, virtual images. SUV
People who are near-sighted can see up close but not far away. They use concave (diverging) lenses, which will make something far away look like it’s up closer. People who are far-sighted use convex (converging) lenses that make near objects look as if they are further away.
The Lens/Mirror Equation Where f is the focal length, do is the distance from the mirror or lens to the object, and di is the distance from the mirror or lens to the image.
Magnification The magnification provided by a lens or mirror Where hi is the height of the image and ho is the height of the object
Yep, it’s time for you to try one… A convex lens has a radius of curvature of 8.0 cm. A 12 cm tall troll is placed 7.0 cm from the lens. How far from the lens should a screen be placed in order to have a sharp image? What is the magnification? How tall is the image? First find the focal length. f = ½ R f = 4.0 cm Now solve for di using the lens equation. di = 9.33 cm Now, get the magnification, m = -di / do m = - 1.33 it’s negative because the image is inverted. Now for the height of the image: m = hi / ho hi = -16 cm
Using the lens equation for concave lenses The focal point is VIRTUAL, so use a negative value for the focal length. Example: if the radius of curvature of a concave lens is 10 cm, the focal length f = -5 cm.
Optometrists and opthalmologists, instead of using the focal length to specify the strength of a lens, use a measurement called the poweror diopter of a lens. The power (diopter) = 1 / f For example, a 20 cm focal length lens has a power of 1 / 0.20 = 5.0 Diopters
Camera Settings Shutter speed: how long the shutter is open. Speeds faster than 1/100 s are normally used. Fast action requires a very small shutter speed.
Camera Settings F-stop: changes the diameter of the iris diaphragm to control the amount of light reaching the film. The SMALLER the f-stop, the LARGER the opening.
The f-stop determines “depth of field”. A larger f-stop (a smaller opening)- will produce an image where everything is in focus. A smaller f-stop (a larger opening)- will produce an image in which only the subject is in focus and everything in the foreground and background is out of focus.
A TELEPHOTO lens has a longer focal length to magnify images. A WIDE-ANGLE lens has a shorter focal length.
Telescopes Refracting telescopes have two lenses, the objective and the eyepiece. The eyepiece lens has a smaller focal length. The objective lens has a larger focal length.
Microscopes Microscopes also have two lenses, the eyepiece and the objective. The eyepiece lens has the longer focal length. The objective has the smaller focal length.
Fresnel Lens The weight and bulk of a large diameter lens can be reduced by constructing the lens from small wedged segments that follow the curvature of the original lens and collapse down to a thin layer.
Augustin Fresnel Fresnel invented this type of lens in 1822.
Fresnel lenses can take a small diverging light source and change it into a powerful straight beam of light.
Small plastic Fresnel lenses are sold at office supply stores as “Magnifying Lenses” Fresnel Lenses are also used in overhead projectors
Large glass lenses that have Fresnel surfaces surrounding a small light source have provided an invaluable contribution to coastline areas for more than 150 years. These lenses are used in…..
Tests showed that while an open flame lost nearly 97% of its light, and a flame with reflectors behind it still lost 83% of its light, the fresnel lens was able to capture all but 17% of its light. Because of its amazing efficiency, a fresnel lens could easily throw its light 20 or more miles to the horizon.
Refraction • When waves enter a new medium, they change direction and speed. The change in direction is called Refraction.
Different frequencies (colors) refract slightly different amounts. This means that the index of refraction, “n”, for blue light is slightly different than “n” for red light. This results in a dispersions of colors as seen in a prism or a rainbow. Blue Bends Best! (ok, actually violet refracts the most…)
Rainbows! Sunlight refracts as it enters a raindrop. Different colors refract different amounts. This spreads out the colors. The light reflects off the back of the raindrop. The light refracts again, spreading out the colors even more. We see the rainbow!
The angles of incidence, reflection, and refraction are all measured from a line drawn “normal” (perpendicular) to the surface. The angle of reflection is ALWAYS equal to the angle of incidence. That is the Law of Reflection. incidence q q reflected refracted q