Top Banner
Light and Optics
48

Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

Jan 11, 2016

Download

Documents

Brianne Berry
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

Light and Optics

Page 2: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

Unit 8: Light and OpticsChapter 22: Optics

22.1 Optics and Reflection

22.2 Refraction

22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images

Page 3: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

22.1 Investigation: Reflection

Key Question:

How do we describe the reflection and refraction of light?

Objectives:

Identify the range of frequencies humans can hear.

Describe the how perception influences the sound humans hear.

Make and analyze a histogram of class data.

Page 4: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

Optics

Optics is the study of how light behaves.

Explaining how magnification occurs is part of the science of optics.

Diagrams of light use one or more imaginary lines called light rays to show how light travels.

Page 5: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

OpticsA ray diagram is an

accurately-drawn sketch showing how light rays interact with mirrors, lenses, and other optical devices.

The curved surface of a magnifying glass bends light so that it appears to come from a much larger thumb.

Page 6: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

Reflection and RefractionA lens is an optical device

that is used to bend light in a specific way.

A converging lens bends light so that the light rays come together to a point.

A diverging lens bends light so it spreads light apart instead of coming together.

Page 7: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

Reflection and Refraction Mirrors reflect light and allow us to see ourselves.

A prism is another optical device that can cause light to change directions.

A prism is a solid piece of glass with flat polished surfaces.

Page 8: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

Light raysReflection occurs when light bounces off a

surface and when light bends while crossing through materials.

Page 9: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

Reflection

Images appear in mirrors because of how light is reflected by mirrors.

The incident ray follows the light falling onto the mirror.

The reflected ray follows the light bouncing off the mirror.

Page 10: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

Reflection In specular reflection each incident ray

bounces off in a single direction.A surface that is not shiny creates diffuse

reflection. In diffuse reflection, a single ray of light

scatters into many directions.

Page 11: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

The law of reflection

The law of reflection states that the angle of incidence equals the angle of reflection.

Light rays reflect from a mirror at the same angle at which they arrive.

Page 12: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

Law of Reflection

The angle of incidence equals the angle of reflection.

The incident ray strikes the mirror.

The reflected ray bounces off.

Page 13: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

Unit 8: Light and OpticsChapter 22: Optics

22.1 Optics and Reflection

22.2 Refraction

22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images

Page 14: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

22.2 Investigation: Refraction

Key Question:

How do we describe the refraction of light?

Objectives:

Listen to beats and explain how the presence of beats is evidence that sound is a wave.

Create interference of sound waves and explain how the interference is evidence for the wave nature of sound.

Page 15: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

RefractionA straw in a glass of

water makes a good example of refraction.

The illusion is caused by refracted light rays when they cross from water back into air before reaching your eyes.

Page 16: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

RefractionMaterials with a higher index of refraction

bend light by a large angle.

Refraction occurs when light rays cross a surface between two materials that have a different index of refraction.

Page 17: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

What direction does bend light?

A light ray going from a low index of refraction into a higher index bends toward the normal line.

A light ray going from a high index of refraction to a low index bends away from the normal line.

Page 18: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.
Page 19: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

Refraction

Vegetable oil and glass have almost the same index of refraction.

If you put a glass rod into a glass cup containing vegetable oil, the rod disappears because light is NOT refracted!

Page 20: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

Total internal reflectionThe angle of incidence at which light begins

reflecting back into a refractive material is called the critical angle.

Total internal reflection happens when the angle of refraction becomes greater than the critical angle.

Page 21: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

Fiber opticsA solid glass rod can

become a pipe that carries light.

This happens if light enters the rod at an angle of incidence greater than the critical angle.

Inside the rod, light reflects off of the inside walls and bounces back into the rod because of total internal reflection.

Page 22: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

Dispersion and prismsThe variation in

refractive index with color is called dispersion.

A rainbow is an example of dispersion in nature.

Tiny rain droplets act as prisms separating the colors in the white light rays from the sun.

Page 23: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

Unit 8: Light and OpticsChapter 22: Optics

22.1 Optics and Reflection

22.2 Refraction

22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images

Page 24: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

22.3 Investigation: Images from Mirrors and LensesKey Question: How do mirrors and

lenses form images?

Objectives: Use the laser flashlight to trace light rays from a lens to

determine its focal length. Show how ray diagrams are used to predict where

images form with lenses and mirrors. Use the thin lens formula to predict the locations of

projected images.

Page 25: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

Mirrors, Lenses, and Images

We see a world of images created on the retina of the eye by the lens in the front of the eye.

Page 26: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

Mirrors, Lenses, and Images

Objects are real physical things that give off or reflect light rays.

Images are “pictures” of objects that are formed in space where light rays meet.

Page 27: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

Mirrors, Lenses, and ImagesThe most common image we see every day is our

own reflection in a mirror.

The image in a mirror is called a virtual image because the light rays do not actually come together.

The virtual image in a flat mirror is created by the eye and brain.

Page 28: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

Virtual images

Because the light rays do not actually meet, a virtual image cannot be projected onto a screen or on film.

Virtual images are illusions created by your eye and brain.

Page 29: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

LensesAn ordinary lens is a

polished, transparent disc, usually made of glass.

The shape of a converging lens is described as being “convex” because the surfaces curve outward.

Page 30: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

Mirrors, Lenses, and ImagesLight rays that enter a converging lens parallel to its

axis bend to meet at a point called the focal point.The distance from the center of the lens to the focal

point is called the focal length.The optical axis usually goes through the center of

the lens.

Page 31: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

Converging lenses

For a converging lens, the first surface (air to glass) bends light rays toward the normal.

At the second surface (glass to air), the rays bend away from the normal line.

Page 32: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

Diverging lenses

A diverging lens bends the rays outward, away from the focal point.

Page 33: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.
Page 34: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

Drawing ray diagrams A ray diagram is the best way to understand

what type of image is formed by a lens, and whether the image is magnified or inverted.

These three rays follow the rules for how light rays are bent by the lens:

1. A light ray passing through the center of the lens is not deflected at all (A).

2. A light ray parallel to the axis passes through the far focal point (B).

3. A light ray passing through the near focal point emerges parallel to the axis (C).

Page 35: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.
Page 36: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

The image formed by a lensA converging lens can also form a real image.

In a real image, light rays from the object actually come back together.

Page 37: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

Real images To make an image of any object, a lens collects rays from every point on an object.

Rays from each point on the object are brought back together again to make each point of the image.

Even when you cover half the lens, you still see the whole image.

Page 38: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

Magnification

The magnification of an image is the ratio of the size of the image divided by the size of the object.

A lens with a magnification of 4 creates an image that appears four times larger than the real-life object.

Page 39: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

The Telescope

When people think of a telescope, most of them think of a refracting telescope.

An astronomical refracting telescope is constructed of two converging lenses with different focal lengths.

The lens with the longest focal length is called the objective and the shorter-focal-length lens is the eyepiece.

Page 40: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

The refracting telescope

The image from this refracting telescope is inverted which is usually fine for looking at objects in space.

Page 41: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

The reflecting telescopeBecause high-quality,

large lenses are difficult to make, reflecting telescopes use a concave mirror instead of one lens.

The diagram shows a reflecting telescope, much like the one used by the Hubble Space Telescope.

Page 42: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

Optical systems

Optical systems are built from lenses, mirrors, and prisms.

Optical systems do two things:— collects light rays— changes/processes the light rays to form an

image.

A camera is an optical system that collects light to record an image.

Page 43: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

Pin-hole cameraA simple optical

system can be made with a pinhole in a box.

The image inside the box forms because light rays that reach a point on the box surface are restricted by the pinhole to come from only a pinhole-sized point on the object.

Page 44: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

Pin-hole camera

The larger the lens, the brighter the image. This is because a larger lens collects more light rays.

Multiple lenses are useful because they allow an optical system to change the size of an image.

A telephoto camera lens uses two or more lenses that move relative to one another.

Page 45: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

Recording images

There are two basic techniques for recording images. — Film records an image by

using special inks that respond to light.

— A digital camera uses a tiny sensor called a CCD.

Page 46: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

Recording images

There are separate light sensors for red light, blue light, and green light.

A color image is recorded as a table of numbers.

Each point on the image has three numbers corresponding to the amount of red light, blue light, and green light.

Page 47: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

Recording imagesThe resolution of a digital

camera is the number of points, called pixels, that can be recorded by the CCD.

A 2-megapixel camera stores 2 million pixels per image.

Since each pixel is three numbers, a 2-megapixel image requires 6 million stored numbers.

Page 48: Light and Optics. Unit 8: Light and Optics Chapter 22: Optics 22.1 Optics and Reflection 22.2 Refraction 22.3 Mirrors, Lenses, and Images.

Hope for the Blind

Mike, a 28-year-old blind man, lies awake on an operating table, while surgeons place a three-millimeter square electrode panel on the retina of his anesthetized eye.

Soon, a medical research team will stimulate the electrodes, in hopes that these electrical impulses will do what the rods and cone cells in his eye once did.