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Physical Science Light
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Physical Science Light. Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Dec 19, 2015

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Page 1: Physical Science Light. Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Physical Science

Light

Page 2: Physical Science Light. Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Electromagnetic Spectrum

Page 3: Physical Science Light. Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Electromagnetic Spectrum

Page 4: Physical Science Light. Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Transparency

Page 5: Physical Science Light. Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Transparency

Page 6: Physical Science Light. Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Polarization

Page 7: Physical Science Light. Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Polarization

Page 8: Physical Science Light. Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Polarization

Page 9: Physical Science Light. Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Liquid Crystals

A

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A B

A

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No current - no alignmentCurrent - Alignment

Light can go throughno light gets through

Page 10: Physical Science Light. Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Liquid Crystals

Page 11: Physical Science Light. Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Liquid Crystal Character Display

Page 12: Physical Science Light. Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Liquid Crystal Character Display

+

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Control

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Bat

Page 13: Physical Science Light. Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Transmission of Light

Page 14: Physical Science Light. Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Sensitivity of Eyes to Color

Page 15: Physical Science Light. Electromagnetic Spectrum.

White Light• The light coming from the sun is

what we call white light or a mixture of all colors

• Can be separated into it components with a prism

Page 16: Physical Science Light. Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Addition of Light

• Blue and red = magenta (purplish color)• Green and blue = cyan (greenish blue)• Red and green = yellow

Page 17: Physical Science Light. Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Mixing of Colors in Pigments

• Mixing of light different than mixing pigments

• When you mix paint, you mix small particles that absorb the complimentary color.

Page 18: Physical Science Light. Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Mixing of Colors in Pigments

• The small particles in the pigment absorb specific colors and thus we see what is not absorbed.

• For instance, a paint that looks red has small particles in it that absorb cyan and thus reflects its complimentary color red.

Page 19: Physical Science Light. Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Complimentary Colors

Page 20: Physical Science Light. Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Diffraction

Bending of light (waves) by means other than reflection of refraction

Page 21: Physical Science Light. Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Waves Around an Object

Page 22: Physical Science Light. Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Interference

Page 23: Physical Science Light. Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Interference

Page 24: Physical Science Light. Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Why is the Sky Blue

• Recall the tuning fork demo – one vibrating fork causes another to vibrate

• When light waves strike atoms in the atmosphere they cause them to scatter light (reemitted light in all directions)

Page 25: Physical Science Light. Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Why is the Sky Blue

Page 26: Physical Science Light. Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Why is the Sky Blue

• The nitrogen a oxygen primarily scatter violet light

• Our eyes are not as sensitive to violet light so we see it mostly as blue

Page 27: Physical Science Light. Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Why is the Sky Blue

• Water vapor effects the color – dry air – really blue

• Particles in the air tend to turn it grey or brown

• After a good rain, the sky seems deeper blue

Page 28: Physical Science Light. Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Why are sunsets red?

• Light that isn’t scattered is transmitted through the air

• Red light is scattered the least and therefore transmitted the best

• The further light travels through the atmosphere, the more opportunity to be scattered

Page 29: Physical Science Light. Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Why are sunsets red?

• If light passes a long way, more of the high frequency (blue) light is scattered and red becomes more predominate.

• When we look toward the sun at sunrise or sunset, we se light traveling through a lot of atmosphere

• So red is the predominate color to reach our eyes.

Page 30: Physical Science Light. Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Why are sunsets red?

Page 31: Physical Science Light. Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Why are clouds white

• Clouds contain clusters of water droplets in various sizes

• Different sized water clusters scatter light at different frequencies

• We see different frequencies as different colors

• If you have clusters producing red, green and blue – we see white

Page 32: Physical Science Light. Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Why are clouds white

• Clouds also contain a large quantity of free electrons

• These electrons vibrating in step increase the intensity of the light therefore clouds tend to be bright

Page 33: Physical Science Light. Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Why are clouds white

• As the water droplets get larger they absorb more of the light so clouds become darker just prior to raining.