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Light

Light. By: Drew Harris. Light.

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Light

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  1. Light By: Drew Harris

  2. Light Energy is the ability to cause things to change. Light is a type of energy. Without light no one can see anything. Light gives things color. Light shines on plants and makes them grow. Some doctors use light energy to perform operations with lasers. Light energy can make cars move. Satellites turn light into electricity in space.

  3. Shadows Shadows move and change shape because of the way light travels. Light travels in straight lines. When you put light in front of a light, a shadow appears. That is where light can’t reach directly. When you stand outside, you block lines of sunlight. When the sun is low in the sky, in the morning and afternoon, your shadow is long. Later in the day, your shadow becomes shorter because as the sun moves you block a different angle. Long ago people found out how to tell time by using shadows. The device used was a sundial. Early in the morning the sun is rising in the east. Later in the day, the sun is in the west.

  4. Reflection and Refraction The bouncing of light off an object is called reflection. If light bounces off a smooth surface it gives you an image you can see. You can’t see your reflection if you are looking at a bumpy surface. Some surfaces light doesn’t bounce off of. That’s why glass is clear. Whenever light hits a surface at an angle, it bends. This is called refraction. When light hits a wall, it is absorbed by the wall. This is called absorption.

  5. Absorption When light hits a wall it is absorbed by the wall. This is called absorption. There are three ways an object can interact with light. Scientists have a name for each of them. Most objects are opaque. You cannot see through them. You can see through a translucent object, but the image is blurry. Transparent objects can be completely seen through. Windows are transparent.

  6. Sunlight Sunlight is made up of many different colors. White light is the light we see every day. It is all the sun’s colors. Different colors of light travel at different speeds. This is how a prism bends light. The visible spectrum is made up of all the colors in the rainbow.

  7. Rainbows Sometimes you can see a rainbow after it rains. That is because raindrops act like prisms. Therefore, you can only see it when the sun is behind you. There are many colors in a rainbow, but many people see seven colors. They are red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet. They ALWAYS appear in this order. ROY G BIV is a good way to remember them.

  8. Roy G Biv R O Y G B I V e r e r l n i d a l e u d o n l e ei l g o n g e e w o t

  9. Colors If you shine two colors at one spot, it makes a different color. White light hits every corner you see. Most objects absorb most of the light, but not all. The color that you see is the part that is not absorbed. You can control absorption and reflection by mixing paint. When you mix yellow and blue, instead of blue or yellow, green is reflected.

  10. Light Vocabulary • reflection – the bouncing of light off an object. • refraction – the bending of the path of light when it moves from one kind of matter to another. • absorption – the stopping of light when it hits a wall or other opaque object. • opaque – reflecting or absorbing all light; no image can be seen. • translucent – allowing some light to pass through; blurry image can be seen. • transparent – allows most light to pass through; clear image can be seen. • prism – a solid object that bends light; not a lens. • Visible spectrum – the range of light energy that people can see.

  11. Lenses A lens is a piece of material in which light is able to pass through. Convex lenses are thicker in the middle. Concave lenses are thinner in the middle. Nearsighted is difficulty seeing objects far away. Farsighted is difficulty seeing objects up close.

  12. Lenses • A lens is a piece of material which light is able to pass through. It is used to refract light. • Convex – A lens which is thicker in the middle than on the ends. • Concave – A lens which thinner in the middle than on the ends. A concave lens looks like the opening to a cave. Therefore, you can remember that it curves in or something that is caving in. • Convex lense– Example; magnifier, telescope, glasses, microscope. Refracts parallel light rays so they come together at a single point called convergence. Point is known asfocal point. • Concave lense– Example: glasses. Refracts the rays so they come apart called divergence. Always forms a virtual image. • Nearsighted – difficulty seeing objects far away. Wear glasses with diverging lenses (concave lenses) • Farsighted – difficulty seeing objects up close. Wear glasses with converging lenses (convex lenses)

  13. Light Review

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