Title: Ray Diagrams
1Ray Diagrams
2Outline
- Reflection
- Mirrors
- Plane mirrors
- Spherical mirrors
- Concave mirrors
- Convex mirrors
- Refraction
- Lenses
- Concave lenses
- Convex lenses
3A ray of light is an extremely narrow beam of
light.
4- All visible objects emit or reflect light rays in
all directions.
5 Our eyes detect light rays.
6 - We see images when
- light rays
- converge in our eyes.
converge come together
7Mirrors
It is possible to see images in mirrors.
image
object
8Reflection(bouncing light)
Reflection is when light changes direction by
bouncing off a surface. When light is reflected
off a mirror, it hits the mirror at the same
angle (the incidence angle, ?i) as it reflects
off the mirror (the reflection angle, ?r). The
normal is an imaginary line which lies at right
angles to the mirror where the ray hits it.
9- Mirrors reflect light rays.
10Plane Mirrors(flat mirrors)
How do we see images in mirrors?
11Plane Mirrors(flat mirrors)
object
image
How do we see images in mirrors?
Light reflected off the mirror converges to form
an image in the eye.
12Plane Mirrors(flat mirrors)
object
image
How do we see images in mirrors?
Light reflected off the mirror converges to form
an image in the eye. The eye perceives light rays
as if they came through the mirror. Imaginary
light rays extended behind mirrors are called
sight lines.
13Plane Mirrors(flat mirrors)
object
image
How do we see images in mirrors?
Light reflected off the mirror converges to form
an image in the eye. The eye perceives light rays
as if they came through the mirror. Imaginary
light rays extended behind mirrors are called
sight lines. The image is virtual since it is
formed by imaginary sight lines, not real light
rays.
14Spherical Mirrors(concave convex)
15Concave Convex(just a part of a sphere)
C
F
f
C the center point of the sphere r radius of
curvature (just the radius of the sphere) F the
focal point of the mirror (halfway between C and
the mirror) f the focal distance, f r/2
16Concave Mirrors(caved in)
F
Light rays that come in parallel to the optical
axis reflect through the focal point.
17Concave Mirror(example)
F
18Concave Mirror(example)
F
The first ray comes in parallel to the optical
axis and reflects through the focal point.
19Concave Mirror(example)
F
The first ray comes in parallel to the optical
axis and reflects through the focal point. The
second ray comes through the focal point and
reflects parallel to the optical axis.
20Concave Mirror(example)
F
The first ray comes in parallel to the optical
axis and reflects through the focal point. The
second ray comes through the focal point and
reflects parallel to the optical axis. A real
image forms where the light rays converge.
21Concave Mirror(example 2)
F
22Concave Mirror(example 2)
F
The first ray comes in parallel to the optical
axis and reflects through the focal point.
23Concave Mirror(example 2)
F
The first ray comes in parallel to the optical
axis and reflects through the focal point. The
second ray comes through the focal point and
reflects parallel to the optical axis.
24Concave Mirror(example 2)
F
The first ray comes in parallel to the optical
axis and reflects through the focal point. The
second ray comes through the focal point and
reflects parallel to the optical axis. The image
forms where the rays converge. But they dont
seem to converge.
25Concave Mirror(example 2)
F
The first ray comes in parallel to the optical
axis and reflects through the focal point. The
second ray comes through the focal point and
reflects parallel to the optical axis. A virtual
image forms where the sight rays converge.
26Your Turn(Concave Mirror)
F
object
concave mirror
- Note mirrors are thin enough that you just draw
a line to represent the mirror - Locate the image of the arrow
27Your Turn(Concave Mirror)
F
object
concave mirror
- Note mirrors are thin enough that you just draw
a line to represent the mirror - Locate the image of the arrow
28Convex Mirrors(curved out)
F
Light rays that come in parallel to the optical
axis reflect from the focal point.
The focal point is considered virtual since sight
lines, not light rays, go through it.
29Convex Mirror(example)
F
30Convex Mirror(example)
F
The first ray comes in parallel to the optical
axis and reflects through the focal point.
31Convex Mirror(example)
F
The first ray comes in parallel to the optical
axis and reflects through the focal point. The
second ray comes through the focal point and
reflects parallel to the optical axis.
32Convex Mirror(example)
F
The first ray comes in parallel to the optical
axis and reflects through the focal point. The
second ray comes through the focal point and
reflects parallel to the optical axis. The light
rays dont converge, but the sight lines do.
33Convex Mirror(example)
F
The first ray comes in parallel to the optical
axis and reflects through the focal point. The
second ray comes through the focal point and
reflects parallel to the optical axis. The light
rays dont converge, but the sight lines do. A
virtual image forms where the sight lines
converge.
34Your Turn(Convex Mirror)
F
convex mirror
- Note mirrors are thin enough that you just draw
a line to represent the mirror - Locate the image of the arrow
35Your Turn(Convex Mirror)
F
image
convex mirror
- Note mirrors are thin enough that you just draw
a line to represent the mirror - Locate the image of the arrow
36Lensmakers Equation
ƒ focal length do object distance di image
distance
if distance is negative the image is behind the
mirror
37Magnification Equation
m magnification hi image height ho object
height
If height is negative the image is upside
down if the magnification is negative the image
is inverted (upside down)
38Refraction(bending light)
Refraction is when light bends as it passes from
one medium into another. When light traveling
through air passes into the glass block it is
refracted towards the normal. When light
passes back out of the glass into the air, it is
refracted away from the normal. Since light
refracts when it changes mediums it can be aimed.
Lenses are shaped so light is aimed at a focal
point.
39Lenses
The first telescope, designed and built by
Galileo, used lenses to focus light from faraway
objects, into Galileos eye. His telescope
consisted of a concave lens and a convex lens.
light from object
convex lens
concave lens
Light rays are always refracted (bent) towards
the thickest part of the lens.
40Concave Lenses
Concave lenses are thin in the middle and make
light rays diverge (spread out).
If the rays of light are traced back (dotted
sight lines), they all intersect at the focal
point (F) behind the lens.
41Concave Lenses
F
Light rays that come in parallel to the optical
axis diverge from the focal point.
The light rays behave the same way if we ignore
the thickness of the lens.
42Concave Lenses
F
Light rays that come in parallel to the optical
axis still diverge from the focal point.
43Concave Lens(example)
F
The first ray comes in parallel to the optical
axis and refracts from the focal point.
44Concave Lens(example)
F
The first ray comes in parallel to the optical
axis and refracts from the focal point. The
second ray goes straight through the center of
the lens.
45Concave Lens(example)
F
The first ray comes in parallel to the optical
axis and refracts from the focal point. The
second ray goes straight through the center of
the lens. The light rays dont converge, but the
sight lines do.
46Concave Lens(example)
F
The first ray comes in parallel to the optical
axis and refracts from the focal point. The
second ray goes straight through the center of
the lens. The light rays dont converge, but the
sight lines do. A virtual image forms where the
sight lines converge.
47Your Turn(Concave Lens)
F
concave lens
- Note lenses are thin enough that you just draw a
line to represent the lens. - Locate the image of the arrow.
48Your Turn(Concave Lens)
F
image
concave lens
- Note lenses are thin enough that you just draw a
line to represent the lens. - Locate the image of the arrow.
49Convex Lenses
Convex lenses are thicker in the middle and focus
light rays to a focal point in front of the lens.
The focal length of the lens is the distance
between the center of the lens and the point
where the light rays are focused.
50Convex Lenses
F
51Convex Lenses
F
Light rays that come in parallel to the optical
axis converge at the focal point.
52Convex Lens(example)
F
The first ray comes in parallel to the optical
axis and refracts through the focal point.
53Convex Lens(example)
F
The first ray comes in parallel to the optical
axis and refracts through the focal point. The
second ray goes straight through the center of
the lens.
54Convex Lens(example)
F
The first ray comes in parallel to the optical
axis and refracts through the focal point. The
second ray goes straight through the center of
the lens. The light rays dont converge, but the
sight lines do.
55Convex Lens(example)
F
The first ray comes in parallel to the optical
axis and refracts through the focal point. The
second ray goes straight through the center of
the lens. The light rays dont converge, but the
sight lines do. A virtual image forms where the
sight lines converge.
56Your Turn(Convex Lens)
optical axis
image
F
convex lens
- Note lenses are thin enough that you just draw a
line to represent the lens. - Locate the image of the arrow.
57Your Turn(Convex Lens)
optical axis
image
F
convex lens
- Note lenses are thin enough that you just draw a
line to represent the lens. - Locate the image of the arrow.
58Thanks/Further Info
- Faulkes Telescope Project Light Optics by
Sarah Roberts - Fundamentals of Optics An Introduction for
Beginners by Jenny Reinhard - PHET Geometric Optics (Flash Simulator)
- Thin Lens Mirror (Java Simulator) by Fu-Kwun
Hwang