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35.6 Huygenss Principle

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Title: 35.6 Huygenss Principle


1
35.6 Huygenss Principle
2
Huygenss Principle
  • Huygens assumed that light is a form of wave
    motion rather than a stream of particles
  • Huygenss Principle is a geometric construction
    for determining the position of a new wave at
    some point based on the knowledge of the wave
    front that preceded it

3
Huygenss Principle, cont.
  • All points on a given wave front are taken as
    point sources for the production of spherical
    secondary waves, called wavelets, which propagate
    outward through a medium with speeds
    characteristic of waves in that medium
  • After some time has passed, the new position of
    the wave front is the surface tangent to the
    wavelets

4
Huygenss Construction for a Plane Wave
  • At t 0, the wave front is indicated by the
    plane AA
  • The points are representative sources for the
    wavelets
  • After the wavelets have moved a distance c?t, a
    new plane BB can be drawn tangent to the
    wavefronts

5
Huygenss Construction for a Spherical Wave
  • The inner arc represents part of the spherical
    wave
  • The points are representative points where
    wavelets are propagated
  • The new wavefront is tangent at each point to the
    wavelet

6
Huygenss Principle and the Law of Reflection
  • The law of reflection can be derived from
    Huygenss principle
  • AB is a wave front of incident light
  • The wave at A sends out a wavelet centered on A
    toward D
  • The wave at B sends out a wavelet centered on B
    toward C
  • AD BC c?t

7
Huygenss Principle and the Law of Reflection,
cont.
  • Triangle ABC is congruent to triangle ADC
  • cos g BC / AC
  • cos g AD / AC
  • Therefore, cos g cos g and g g
  • This gives ?1 ?1
  • This is the law of reflection

8
Huygenss Principle and the Law of Refraction
  • Ray 1 strikes the surface and at a time interval
    ?t later, ray 2 strikes the surface
  • During this time interval, the wave at A sends
    out a wavelet, centered at A, toward D
  • The wave at B sends out a wavelet, centered at B,
    toward C

9
Huygenss Principle and the Law of Refraction,
cont.
  • The two wavelets travel in different media,
    therefore their radii are different
  • From triangles ABC and ADC, we find

10
Huygenss Principle and the Law of Refraction,
final
  • The preceding equation can be simplified to
  • This is Snells law of refraction

11
35.7 Dispersion and Prisms
  • For a given material, the index of refraction
    varies with the wavelength of the light passing
    through the material
  • This dependence of n on ? is called dispersion
  • Snells law indicates light of different
    wavelengths is bent at different angles when
    incident on a refracting material

12
Variation of Index of Refraction with Wavelength
  • The index of refraction for a material generally
    decreases with increasing wavelength
  • Violet light bends more than red light when
    passing into a refracting material

13
Angle of Deviation
  • The ray emerges refracted from its original
    direction of travel by an angle d, called the
    angle of deviation
  • The angle of deviation depends on the wavelength

14
Refraction in a Prism
  • Since all the colors have different angles of
    deviation, white light will spread out into a
    spectrum
  • Violet deviates the most
  • Red deviates the least
  • The remaining colors are in between

15
Example 35.5 Measuring n from a Prism
  • The minimum angle of deviation (dmin) for a prism
    occurs when the incident angle ?1 is such that
    the refracted ray inside the prism makes the same
    angle with the normal to the two prism faces.
  • Obtain an expression for the index of refraction
    of the prism material.

16
Example 35.5 Measuring n from a Prism, cont.
  • From the geometry
  • From Snells Law (with n 1 for air)

17
The Rainbow
  • A ray of light strikes a drop of water in the
    atmosphere
  • It undergoes both reflection and refraction
  • First refraction at the front of the drop
  • Violet light will deviate the most
  • Red light will deviate the least

18
The Rainbow, 2
  • At the back surface the light is reflected
  • It is refracted again as it returns to the front
    surface and moves into the air
  • The rays leave the drop at various angles
  • The angle between the white light and the most
    intense violet ray is 40
  • The angle between the white light and the most
    intense red ray is 42

19
Active Figure 35.23
(SLIDESHOW MODE ONLY)
20
Observing the Rainbow
  • If a raindrop high in the sky is observed, the
    red ray is seen
  • A drop lower in the sky would direct violet light
    to the observer
  • The other colors of the spectra lie in between
    the red and the violet

21
Double Rainbow
  • The secondary rainbow is fainter than the primary
  • The secondary rainbow arises from light that
    makes two reflections from the interior surface
    before exiting the raindrop
  • Higher-order rainbows are possible, but their
    intensity is low

22
35.8 Total Internal Reflection
  • A phenomenon called total internal reflection can
    occur when light is directed from a medium having
    a given index of refraction toward one having a
    lower index of refraction

23
Possible Beam Directions
  • Possible directions of the beam are indicated by
    rays numbered 1 through 5
  • The refracted rays are bent away from the normal
    since n1 n2

24
Critical Angle
  • There is a particular angle of incidence that
    will result in an angle of refraction of 90
  • This angle of incidence is called the critical
    angle, ?C
  • (35.10)

25
Active Figure 35.26
(SLIDESHOW MODE ONLY)
26
Critical Angle, cont.
  • For angles of incidence greater than the critical
    angle, the beam is entirely reflected at the
    boundary
  • This ray obeys the law of reflection at the
    boundary
  • Total internal reflection occurs only when light
    is directed from a medium of a given index of
    refraction toward a medium of lower index of
    refraction

27
Example 35.6 Find Critical Angle ?C
  • Find ?C for an Air-Water boundary.
  • n1 1.00 and n2 1.33

28
Example 35.7 A view from the Fishs Eye
  • A fish in a still pond looks upward toward the
    waters surface. What does it see?
  • Using the result from Example 35.6
  • At an angle less than ?C (48.8) the fish can see
    out of the water
  • At 48.8 the light has to skim along the waters
    surface before been refracted, so the fish can
    see the whole shore of the pond.
  • At an angle greater than ?C (48.8) the fish sees
    a reflection of the bottom of the pond.

29
Fiber Optics
  • An application of internal reflection
  • Plastic or glass rods are used to pipe light
    from one place to another
  • Applications include
  • medical use of fiber optic cables for diagnosis
    and correction of medical problems
  • Telecommunications

30
Fiber Optics, cont.
  • A flexible light pipe is called an optical fiber
  • A bundle of parallel fibers (shown) can be used
    to construct an optical transmission line

31
Construction of an Optical Fiber
  • The transparent core is surrounded by cladding
  • The cladding has a lower n than the core
  • This allows the light in the core to experience
    total internal reflection
  • The combination is surrounded by the jacket

32
Material for the Midterm
  • Examples to Read!!!
  • NONE
  • Homework to be solved in Class!!!
  • Question 19
  • Problems 31, 36
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