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Announcements

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Announcements HW set 10 due this week; covers Ch 24.5-9 (skip 24.8) and 25.1-3 Office hours: Prof. Kumar s Tea and Cookies 5-6 pm today My office hours Th 2 -3 pm – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Announcements


1
  • Announcements
  • HW set 10 due this week covers Ch 24.5-9 (skip
    24.8) and 25.1-3
  • Office hours
  • Prof. Kumars Tea and Cookies 5-6 pm today
  • My office hours Th 2 -3 pm
  • or make an appointment
  • Final exam Saturday 4/23, 3 5 pm, CUMULATIVE
    EXAM
  • Make-up exam, Wednesday 4/20, 510 700 pm,
    NPB 1220, CUMULATIVE EXAM
  • Always check out http//www.phys.ufl.edu/courses/
    phy2054/spring11/ for more announcements
  • QUESTIONS? PLEASE ASK!

2
From last time
  • Constructive and Destructive Interference
  • Youngs double slit experiment
  • Bright fringe d sin ?bright m ?
  • Dark fringe d sin ?bright (m1/2) ?
  • Thin film interference
  • Three different media
  • Constructive and destructive interference
    equations depend on indices of refraction for
    each media

3
Interference in Thin Films
  • Interference is due to the interaction of the
    waves reflected from both surfaces of the film
  • Ray 1 - phase change of 180 with respect to the
    incident ray
  • Ray 2 - no phase change with respect to the
    incident wave
  • Ray 2 travels an additional physical distance of
    2t in the film
  • The wavelength ? is reduced by n in the film ?
    the optical path length is 2 n t
  • Constructive interference
  • 2 n t (m ½ ) ? m 0, 1, 2
  • takes into account both the difference in optical
    path length for the two rays and the 180 phase
    change
  • Destructive interference
  • 2 n t m ? m 0, 1, 2

4
Anti-reflection coatings
  • Two phase shifts
  • Constructive interference
  • 2 n t m ?
  • m 0, 1, 2
  • takes into account both the difference in optical
    path length for the two rays and both 180 phase
    changes
  • Destructive interference
  • 2 n t (m ½ ) ?
  • m 0, 1, 2

5
Handling thin films problems
  • Identify the thin film causing the interference
  • Determine the indices of refraction in the film
    and the media on either side of it
  • Determine the number of phase reversals zero,
    one or two
  • Interference is constructive if the path
    difference is an integral multiple of ? and
    destructive if the path difference is an odd half
    multiple of ?
  • NOTE The conditions are reversed if one of the
    waves undergoes a phase change on reflection

Equation 1 phase reversal 0 or 2 phase reversals
2nt (m ½) l constructive destructive
2nt m l destructive constructive
6
Diffraction
  • Huygens principle light waves spread out after
    they pass through slits
  • ? diffraction
  • Diffraction occurs when waves pass through small
    openings, around obstacles or by sharp edges
  • A good example was Youngs double slit experiment
  • A single slit placed between a distant light
    source and a screen produces a diffraction
    pattern
  • broad, intense central band
  • a series of narrower, less intense secondary
    bands ? secondary maxima
  • In between the secondary maxima are a series of
    dark bands ? minima
  • Cannot be explained by geometric optics!!

7
Single Slit Diffraction
DEMO
  • Huygens principle - each portion of the slit
    acts as a source
  • Light from one side of the slit interferes with
    light from the other side
  • The resultant intensity on the screen depends on
    the direction ?
  • Wave 1 travels farther than wave 3 by a path
    length difference d (a/2) sin ?
  • If d l/2, the two waves cancel each other and
    destructive interference results

8
Single Slit Diffraction, 2
  • Divide slit into 1/4, 1/6,
  • In general, destructive interference occurs for a
    single slit of width for
  • m ?1, ?2, ?3,
  • Note doesnt give any information about the
    variations in intensity along the screen

9
Single Slit Diffraction, 3
  • Broad central bright fringe flanked by much
    weaker bright fringes alternating with dark
    fringes
  • Points of constructive interference lie
    approximately halfway between the dark fringes

10
Problem 24.36, p 819
  • A screen is placed 50 cm from a single slit that
    is illuminated with light of wavelength 680 nm
    wavelength. If the distance between the first
    and third minima is 3.0 mm, what is the width of
    the slit?

11
Polarization of Light Waves
  • Each electron in an atom produces a wave with its
    own orientation of E
  • Electrons in oscillating sinusoidal motion
  • Unpolarized light - all directions of the
    electric field vector are equally possible and
    lie in a plane perpendicular to the direction of
    propagation of the light
  • A wave is said to be linearly polarized if the
    resultant electric field vibrates in the same
    direction at all times at a particular point
  • Polarization can be obtained from an unpolarized
    beam by
  • Selective absorption
  • Reflection
  • Scattering
  • In Lasers

unpolarized
polarized
E
12
(No Transcript)
13
Polarization by Selective Absorption
  • The most common technique for polarizing light
  • Your sunglasses!!
  • Uses a material that
  • i) transmits waves whose electric field vectors
    in the plane are parallel to a certain direction
    and
  • ii) absorbs waves whose electric field vectors
    are perpendicular to that direction

14
Selective Absorption
  • ET Eo cos q
  • I E2
  • ? IT Io cos2 ?
  • Io is the intensity of the polarized wave
    incident on the analyzer
  • This is known as Malus Law and applies to any
    two polarizing materials whose transmission axes
    are at an angle of ? to each other

15
Problem 24.58, p 821
  • Plane-polarized light is incident on a single
    polarizing disk, with the direction of E0
    parallel to the direction of the transmission
    axis. Through what angle should the disk be
    rotated so the intensity of the light is reduced
    by a factor of (a) 2, (b) 4, and (c) 6?

16
Polarization by Reflection
17
Polarization by Reflection II
  • The angle of incidence for which the reflected
    beam is completely polarized is called the
    polarizing angle, ?p
  • Brewsters Law relates the polarizing angle to
    the index of refraction for the material
  • ?p may also be called Brewsters Angle

Brewsters Angle
18
Polarization by Scattering
Why is the sky blue?
  • When light is incident on a system of particles,
    the electrons in the medium can absorb and
    reradiate part of the light
  • This process is called scattering
  • An example of scattering is the sunlight reaching
    an observer on the earth becoming polarized
  • The horizontal part of the electric field vector
    in the incident wave causes the charges to
    vibrate horizontally
  • The vertical part of the vector simultaneously
    causes them to vibrate vertically
  • Horizontally and vertically polarized waves are
    emitted

19
Optical Activity
  • Certain materials display the property of optical
    activity
  • A substance is optically active if it rotates the
    plane of polarization of transmitted light
  • Also called birefringence
  • Optical activity occurs in a material because of
    an asymmetry in the shape of its constituent
    materials

20
Answer to 23.36
21
Answer to 23.58
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