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Chapter 18: Light and Optics

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Title: Chapter 18: Light and Optics


1
Chapter 18 Light and Optics
2
Objectives
  • Summarize the science of optics.
  • Describe how mirrors and lenses can be combined
    to make complex optical tools.
  • Explain how optical tools are used to extend
    natural vision.
  • Recognize how laser light is made and used in
    optical technology

3
Optics is the science of light and vision
  • Optics is the study of visible light and the ways
    in which visible light interacts with the eye to
    produce vision.
  • Mirrors, lenses, eyeglasses, cameras, lasers are
    all optical tools.

4
Fiber Optics
  • Used to transmit information efficiently.
  • EX) Fiber Optic Cables.

5
Fiber Optics
  • Is Technology based on the use of light to send
    signals through transparent wires called optical
    fibers
  • Very important in communications for telephones,
    TV wires, and broadband internet connections.
  • Medical uses to see inside a patients body

6
Lasers
  • A laser is a device that produces an intense,
    concentrated beam of light that is brighter than
    sunlight.
  • A laser is made in a special tube called an
    optical cavity in which an energy source
    stimulates material to give off light waves.

7
Laser Beams
  • A Laser Beam can travel great distances without
    spreading because its light waves are parallel
    and very concentrated.
  • The light waves in a laser beam are all one
    wavelength and in one phase.

8
Uses of Lasers
  • Surveyors use them to measure distances and
    angles.
  • Used to read bar codes, to scan images and pages
    of text and to create holograms

9
Future Uses of Lasers
  • Scientist plan to use them in nanotechnologyperfo
    rm extremely fine operations.
  • New ways of transferring energy.
  • Supply energy for the spacecraft.

10
Mirrors and Lenses can be more Powerful Optical
Tools
  • For example Mirrors and lenses can be combined
    with each other, as they are in an overhead
    projector.

11
Microscopes
  • Used to see small objects.
  • A Microscope enlarges images using a combination
    of convex lens. (2)
  • Most microscopes use a light or mirror to shine
    more light on the object.
  • Page 613

12
Telescopes
  • A reflection telescope has a CONCAVE mirror that
    gathers and focuses light.

13
Telescopes
  • Used to see objects to far away to see well with
    the naked eye.
  • 2 Types
  • Refracting telescope is made by combining lenses.
  • Reflection is made by combining lenses and
    mirrors.

14
Refraction Reflection
15
Lights, Camera, Action.
  • Most film cameras focus images
  • Like the eyes
  • Read Page 614

16
  • Objectives
  • Describe how mirrors control reflection.
  • Describe how mirrors produce images.
  • Identify how a material medium can refract light.
  • Describe how lenses control refraction.
  • Recognize how lenses produce images.

17
Mirrors use Regular Reflection
  • When light waves strike an object, they either
    pass through it or they bounce off its surface.
  • The law of reflection states that the angle of
    reflection equals the angle of incidence.

18
Regular Reflection
  • The reflection of parallel light rays all in the
    same direction is called regular reflection.
  • Surface of the object is smooth, like a mirror,
    light rays that come from the same direction will
    bounce off in the same new direction.

19
Diffuse Reflection
  • If the surface is not very smooth, light rays
    strike it from the same direction and bounce off
    in many new directions.
  • The reflection of parallel light rays in many
    different directions is called diffuse
    reflection.
  • EX) Paper, Cloth

20
An Image
  • When you look in the mirror, you see an image of
    yourself.
  • An image is a picture of an object formed by
    waves of light.
  • The image of yourself is reflected off of you,
    onto the mirror.

21
Law of Reflection
  • States that the angle of incidence equals the
    angle of reflection
  • EX) A ray of light hits a mirror at an angle of
    incidence, the reflection angle is equal.

22
Focal Length
  • The focal length of a lens is the distance from
    the center of a lens to its focal point.

23
Flat Mirrors
  • Looks Exactly like you
  • Produces an image that is identical, but opposite
    to how you look

24
Convex
  • A Convex mirror or lens is curved outward.
  • A convex lens brings light rays to a focal point.
  • The distance from the center of the lens to the
    focal point is the focal length.
  • A convex lens forms a right-side up image when
    the object is less than one focal length away.
  • If the object is twice the distance, the image
    will appear Upside down smaller
  • A convex mirror will produce an image that is
    right side up smaller.

25
Concave
  • A Concave mirror or lens is curved inward towards
    the center.
  • Parallel light rays that pass through a concave
    mirror are reflected to a focal point

26
Concave/Convex
27
Focal Point
  • The rays striking a concave mirror cross and then
    move apart again. The point at which the rays
    meet is called the focal point of the mirror.
  • P. 597

28
Light Waves and Refraction
29
Light Waves
  • Light Waves move at different speeds through
    different Mediums.
  • A ray of light will slow down when it moves from
    air into the denser medium of a pond.
  • The amount direction a light ray bends when it
    enters a new medium depend on how dense the
    medium is.
  • A light wave enters a new medium at an angle
    other than 90ยบ, the wave will turn toward the
    normal.

30
Electromagnetic Waves
  • Electromagnetic Waves from a star will travel
    through empty space, they travel in straight
    lines because the medium has not changed.

31
A medium can refract light
  • Some light rays reflect off the surface of glass.
  • Refraction occurs when a wave strikes a new
    mediumsuch as the windowat an angle other than
    90 and keeps going forward in a slightly
    different direction.

32
Refraction of Light
  • Page 600
  • Waves moving at an angle into a denser medium
    turns toward the normal.
  • Waves moving at an angle into a thinner medium
    turn away from the normal

33
Refraction and Rainbows
  • Rainbows are caused by
  • Refraction and reflection of
  • Light through spherical water
  • Drops, which acts as prisms.
  • Only one color reaches
  • Your eye from each drop.
  • Red appears at the top of a
  • Rainbow because it is coming
  • From higher drops, while violet
  • Comes from lower drops.

34
Shape determines how lenses from images
  • Just as a curved mirrors distort images, certain
    transparent mediums called lenses alter what you
    see through them.
  • A lens is a clear optical tool that refracts
    light. Different lenses refract light in
    different ways and form images useful for a
    variety of purposes.

35
Convex Concave Lenses
  • A convex lens causes parallel light rays to meet
    at a focal point
  • A concave lens causes parallel light rays to
    spread out.
  • Page 601 602

36
Images Formed by Lenses
  • Notice the distance between the penguin and the
    lens in the illustration on page 602.
  • The distance is measured in terms of a focal
    length, which is the distance from the center of
    the lens to the lenss focal point.

37
To summarize
  • If you look at an object through a concave lens,
    youll see an image of the object that is right
    side up and smaller than the object normally
    appears.
  • If you look at an object through a convex lens,
    the image could be formed upside down and larger
    if two focal lengths away. Or it will appear
    right side up and larger if one focal length away.

38
How does a camera lens form an image
  • A camera lens uses refraction to focus light on
    the film, or in a digital camera.
  • When a ray of light passes from a less dense to a
    more dense medium (such as from air to glass) it
    slows down. If it strikes the glass surface at an
    angle, it is also bent a little, and this is
    called refraction. When it passes back into air,
    it speeds up again, and is again refracted if the
    surface is at an angle.

39
18.3The Eye is a Natural Optical Tool
  • Objectives
  • Recognize how the eye depends on natural lenses.
  • Explain how artificial lenses can be used to
    correct vision problems.

40
Eyes gathers and focuses light
  • Eyes transmit light, refract light, and respond
    to different wavelengths of light.
  • Eyes contain natural lenses that focus images of
    objects and then sends signals to the brains.
  • The brain interprets these signals as shape,
    brightness, and color.

41
How Light Travels through the Human Eye
  • Light enters the eye through the cornea, a
    transparent membrane that covers the eye.
  • The two parts of the eye that refract light are
    the CORNEA AND LENS

42
Retina
  • The retina detects an image and send signals to
    the brain
  • The CORNEA acts like a convex lens
  • The lens adjusts to focus an image on the retina

43
How Light Travels through the Human Eye
  • Light continues through the pupil, a circular
    opening that controls how much light enters the
    eye.
  • The pupil is surrounded by the iris, which opens
    and closes to change the size of the pupil.

44
How Light Travels through the Human Eye
  • Next, the light passes through the lens. It
    refracts light to make fine adjustments for near
    or far objects.
  • The lens is connected to tiny muscles that
    contract and relax to control the amount of
    refraction that occurs and to move the focal
    point.

45
How Light Travels through the Human Eye
  • 4. The light then passes through he clear center
    of the eye and strikes the retina. The retina
    contains specialized cells that respond to light.
    Some of these cells sends signals through the
    optic nerve to the brain.

46
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47
How the Eye Forms Images
  • For a complete image to be formed in the eye and
    communicated to the brain. The Retina plays a
    very important role.

48
Retina Rod Cells
  • Rod cells distinguish between white and black and
    shades of gray. Help in night vision.

49
Retina Cone Cells
  • Cone cells- respond to different wavelength of
    light so they detect color. There are three
    types Red, Blue, and Green. They respond to
    other colors by using a combination of the three.

50
Cameras
  • Just like our eyes have to focus on an image, we
    must move the lens of a camera to focus an image
    onto film

51
Corrective Lenses can Improve Vision
  • How many of you wear contacts or glasses?
  • About 36 million wear contact lenses
  • When the image formed by the lens of the eye does
    not fall exactly on the retina. A blurry image
    is formed. Artifical lenses are used to correct
    this problem.

52
Farsighted
  • Objects are clearer to a farsighted person when
    the objects are farther away. It occurs when the
    lens of the eye focuses an objects image behind
    the retina.This can be caused by aging.
  • A person who is farsighted can be helped by a
    convex lens, that make light rays converge
    farther towards the retina.

53
Corrective Lenses
  • Nearsighted cannot see objects clearly unless
    they are near. It occurs when the lens of the
    eye focuses the image in front of the retina.
  • A person who is nearsighted wears glasses to
    spread light out so that the image is focused on
    the retina.

54
Surgery
  • Doctors can use surgical procedures to shape the
    cornea.
  • To correct nearsightedness, surgeons remove
    tissue from the center of the cornea.
  • To correct farsightedness, surgeons remove tissue
    from around the edge of the cornea.
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vdZZguJNitnU

55
Contacts
  • Contact lenses also correct vision by changing
    the way the cornea refracts light.
  • CONTACTS work with the cornea and tears to act as
    a single lens.
  • This is only a temporary fix.

56
Objectives
  • Identify sources of EM waves
  • Recognize how EM waves transfer energy
  • Describe how different EM waves are used
  • Observe how to detect visible light
  • Explain how visible light is produced
  • Describe bioluminescence
  • Identify types of artificial light
  • Recognize how light waves interact with materials
  • Recognize why objects have color how colors are
    produced

57
Visible Light Spectrum
58
Electromagnetic Waves
  • Electromagnetic waves can be converted into
    useful forms (Microwave ovens)

59
Incandescence Bioluminescence
  • Incandescence is the production of light by
    materials at high temperatures.
  • Some organisms can produce their own light, this
    is called bioluminescence.

60
Artificial Lighting
  • There are many types of artificial lighting
    (Textbook Page 571-572)

61
Light Waves
  • Light can be transmitted, reflected, absorbed or
    scattered.
  • A prism is a tool that uses refraction to spread
    out different wave lengths of light

62
Polarization
  • Polarization is a quality of light in which all
    of its waves vibrate in the same direction
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