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Properties of Light - Lecture Slides - Basic Concepts of Physics, Slides of Physics

Key points from this lecture are: Properties of Light, Accelerating Electrons, Electromagnetic Waves, Constant Speed, Electromagnetic Spectrum, Electromagnetic Spectrum, Transparent Materials, Earth’s Atmosphere, Shadows, The Eye Topics covered in Basic concepts of Physics course are: Newton’s Laws of Motion, Linear Motion, Momentum, Energy, Rotation, Gravity, Liquids, Gase, Plasmas, Heat, Waves, Sound, Electrostatics, Electric current, Magnetism, Electromagnetic Induction, Color, Light, Atom an

Typology: Slides

2012/2013

Uploaded on 08/13/2013

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Download Properties of Light - Lecture Slides - Basic Concepts of Physics and more Slides Physics in PDF only on Docsity! Today: Chapter 26 (Properties of Light) docsity.com Light: preliminaries • Light is the only thing we actually see – e.g. When I “see” you, I am actually seeing light reflected off you. • Light is a transverse wave (recall earlier), whose origin is accelerating electrons, e.g. in the sun • Accelerating electrons not only can produce light, but also radio waves, microwaves, x-rays…. Grouped together as electromagnetic waves. • Different types of electromagnetic waves differ in their frequency (and wavelength): light is just a small part of the electromagnetic spectrum with certain frequency range docsity.com Electromagnetic Wave Velocity • An electromagnetic wave travels at one constant speed through space. Why? Inherently due to wave nature (e.g. objects like spacecrafts can change speed, and go at different constant speeds); specifically, induction and energy conservation: • Recall (last chap): the strength of the induced fields depends on the rate of change of the field that created it. So, if light traveled slower, then its electric field would change slower, so would generate a weaker magnetic field, that in turn generates a weaker electric field, etc wave dies out. Similarly, if light sped up, would get stronger fields, with ever- increasing energy. • Both cases violate energy conservation. docsity.com Electromagnetic Wave Velocity cont. • Then what is the critical speed at which mutual induction sustains itself? Maxwell calculated this: 300 000 km/s = c i.e. 3 x 108 m/s • This is the speed in vacuum, and about the same in air. Slower in different media (see later) docsity.com The Electromagnetic Spectrum • In vacuum, all electromagnetic waves move at the same speed c, but differ in their frequency (and wavelength). • Visible light: 4.3 x 1014 Hz to 7 x 1014 Hz i.e. red is at the low-freq end of light (next lowest is infrared) violet is the high-freq end (next highest is ultraviolet) and long-wavelength short wavelength recall speed c = f  docsity.com 1. Yes 2. No Is it correct to say that in every case, without exception, any radio wave travels faster than any sound wave? Any radio wave travels at the speed of light. A radio wave is an electromagnetic wave, like a low-freq light wave. A sound wave, on the other hand, is fundamentally different. A sound wave is a mechanical disturbance propagated through a material medium by material particles that vibrate against one another. Sound is not part of the EM spectrum! In air, the speed of sound is about 340 m/s, about one millionth the speed of a radio wave. Sound travels faster in other media, and light is slower in other media, but, these factors are usually more like factor of 2 or 3, at most, not a million… Answer: 1, until very recently*: * In 1999, however, researchers in carefully controlled expts managed to slow light down to 17m/s! docsity.com The electromagnetic spectrum cont. • Recall Ch 18 on waves: frequency of wave = freq of vibrating source. Applies to EM waves too, where source is oscillating electrons • Note that EM waves are everywhere! Not just in air, but in interplanetary “empty space” - actually a dense sea of radiation. Vibrating electrons in sun put out EM waves of frequencies across the whole spectrum. • Any body at any temperature other than absolute zero, have electrons that vibrate and (re-)emit in response to the EM radiation that permeates us, even if very low frequency. docsity.com Question A helium-neon laser emits light of wavelength 633 nanometers (nm). What frequency is this? What color ? Use c = f , so f = c/ = (3 x 108 m/s)/(633 x 10-9 m) = 4.74 x 1014 Hz i.e. red docsity.com Transparent materials • When light goes through matter, electrons in the matter are forced to vibrate along with the light. • Recall Ch 20 on sound – response of material depends on how close the forced vibration is to the natural frequency of the material. Same is true here with light. • First note that visible light has very high freq (~1014 Hz), so if charged object is to respond to this freq, it has to have very little inertia i.e. mass. An electron does have tiny mass! • Transparent materials – allow light to pass in straight lines docsity.com Transparent materials Simple model of atom: think of electrons attached to nucleus with springs. Light makes these springs oscillate. • Different atoms/molecules have different “spring strengths” - so different natural frequencies. • If this natural freq = that of impinging light, resonance occurs (recall ch 20) i.e. vibrations of electrons build up to high amplitudes, electrons hold on to the energy for “long” times, while passing it to other atoms via collisions, finally transferred to heat. Not transparent, i.e opaque • So materials that are opaque to visible light, have natural frequencies in the range of visible light. docsity.com Transparent materials cont. • Glass is transparent: its natural freqs are higher, in the ultraviolet range. So glass is not transparent to ultraviolet. But is transparent to lower freqs i.e. visible spectrum. • What happens in this off-resonance case? Atoms are forced into vibration but at less amplitude, so don’t hold on to the energy long enough to transfer much to other atoms through collisions. Less is transferred to heat; instead vibrating electrons re-emit it as light at same frequency of the impinging light. (see more next slides) • Infrared waves – frequencies lower than visible – can force vibrations of atoms/molecules as well as electrons in glass. Increases internal energy and temperature of glass. Often called heat waves. docsity.com Questions (1) Why in the sunlight is a black tar road hotter to the touch than a pane of window glass? Sunlight is absorbed and turned to internal energy in the road surface, but transmitted through the glass to somewhere else. (2) Can you get sunburned through a glass window? Glass is opaque to ultraviolet light, so won’t transmit it, so you won’t get sunburned (although you might get hot! as light in the visible-range is transmitted and then you absorb it). docsity.com Opaque materials • Have natural frequencies in the visible range, E.g. books, you, tables, metals… • So, they absorb light without re-emitting it. • Light energy goes into random kinetic energy, i.e. heat. • Usually, not all the frequencies in the visible light spectrum are resonant - those that aren’t, get reflected: this gives the object color (see much more next chapter) docsity.com Some cases of interest: • Earth’s atmosphere – transparent to some UV, all visible, some infrared. But is (thankfully) opaque to high UV. - the small amount of UV that does get through causes dangerous sunburn. - clouds are semi-transparent to UV, so can still get sunburned on a cloudy day. • Water – transparent in the visible. - This explains why objects look darker when wet: Light is absorbed and re-emitted, bouncing around inside wet region; each bounce loses some energy to material. So less light enters your eye – looks darker. docsity.com Shadows of the earth and moon • Both earth and moon cast shadows when sunlight incident • When one passes into the shadow of the other – eclipse: Demonstrates umbra vs penumbra: Sun is so big that some parts of earth are in the umbra - see complete darkness - whereas others are in penumbra – see partial eclipse (crescent) solar eclipse lunar eclipse docsity.com Questions (1) Why do you not cast a shadow on the ground on an overcast day? A relatively small light and distant source such as the sun casts a relatively sharp shadow. On an overcast day, the primary sun is blocked and the whole sky (the “secondary” light source), illuminates you. The source is now so big that no shadow is seen. (2) Lunar eclipses are always eclipses of a full moon. i.e moon is full just before and after the earth’s shadow passes over it. Why? Can we have a lunar eclipse when we have a half-moon? Lunar eclipse is perfect alignment of Sun-Earth-Moon. Not-quite- perfect alignment gives Earth observers a full view of the moon since the sunny-side of the moon is facing the night-side of the Earth. We cannot have a half-moon eclipse, since at halfmoon, the lines from Earth to moon and from Earth to sun are at right angles, so shadow of the Earth does not fall on the moon. docsity.com Clicker Question While Earth is experiencing a total solar eclipse, an observer on the moon on the side that faces the Earth would see A) Earth disappear from the sky. B) Earth dim and turn reddish. C) nothing unusual. D) a tiny dark spot move across the face of Earth. Answer: D Solar eclipse is when the moon is between the sun and earth, all in a line. To a viewer on the earth, the moon blocks the sun. A viewer on the moon facing the earth, sees the moon’s shadow on the earth – a tiny dark spot. docsity.com More on the eye • Periphery of eye is very sensitive to motion – makes sense from evolutionary point of view. Eg. DEMO for homework! Get a friend to jiggle colored objects at side, where you can only just see them – you see them moving, but can’t tell what color they are! docsity.com • There’s some more about the eye in your book, that makes for interesting reading, but won’t be covered or examinable in this course. E.g. How pupil dilates when we are sense something that pleases us, and contracts if we find something repugnant! E.g. “Lateral Inhibition” effect – which tends to make us notice boundaries…. E.g. Optical illusions – consider the illusions in Fig. 26.21 in your book! docsity.com Given that cones don’t work at low intensity, why do stars always look white to us, even though time-exposure with camera shows them to be brightly colored (red for cooler stars, blue for hotter)? A)Because the color only arises through interaction with the camera – actually starlight is white B) Because starlight too weak to trigger the cones in our retina C) Because starlight is too weak to trigger the rods D) None of the above Clicker Question Answer: B Cones have a higher threshold intensity before they fire, c.f. rods. So we see the stars with our rods which cannot detect color; hence perceived as white. docsity.com
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