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Chapter 29

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Refraction of Light Atmospheric Refraction ... Properties of Atoms and the Periodic Table Subject: Atoms & Periodic Table Author: Donna Myers Last modified by: – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 29


1
Chapter 29 Reflection Refraction
  • Chapter preview
  • Sections
  • Reflection
  • The Law of Reflection
  • Mirrors
  • Diffuse Reflection
  • Reflection of Sound
  • Refraction
  • Refraction of Sound
  • Refraction of Light
  • Atmospheric Refraction
  • Dispersion in a Prism
  • The Rainbow
  • Total Internal Reflection

2
Reflection Refraction
  • Section 29.1Reflection

3
Reflection
  • Reflection some or all of a wave bounces back
    into the first medium when hitting a boundary of
    a second medium
  • When all the wave energy is reflected back
    instead of being transmitted, it is total
    reflection
  • If some energy is transmitted and some is
    reflected, the wave is partially reflected

4
Reflection
5
Reflection Refraction
  • Section 29.2The Law of Reflection

6
The Law of Reflection
  • The direction of incidence and reflection is best
    described by straight-line rays
  • Incident rays and reflected rays make equal
    angles with a line perpendicular to the surface,
    called the normal
  • Angle of Incidence angle made by the incident
    ray and the normal
  • Angle of Reflection angle made by the reflected
    ray and the normal
  • Law of Reflection the angle of incidence and
    the angle of reflection are equal

7
The Law of Reflection
8
Reflection Refraction
  • Section 29.3Mirrors

9
Mirrors
  • Virtual Image the point located behind a mirror
    where an object appears to originate
  • Your eye cannot tell the difference between an
    object and its virtual image
  • The image is as far behind a mirror as the object
    is in front of the mirror

10
Mirrors
  • The law of reflection holds for curved mirrors.
  • a. The image formed by a Convex mirror is smaller
    than the object.
  • b. When an object is close to a concave mirror,
    the image can be larger than the object.
  • For reflections in a plane mirror, object size
    equals image size and object distance equals
    image distance.

11
Reflection Refraction
  • Section 29.4Diffuse Reflection

12
Diffuse Reflection
  • Diffuse Reflection light incident on a rough
    surface is reflected in many directions
  • A surfaces roughness is dependent upon the
    wavelength of the wave incident upon that
    surface the longer the wavelength, the smoother
    the surface will appear
  • To a piece of paper, light is reflecting
    diffusely

The Law of Reflection is Always Observed
(regardless of the orientation of the surface)
13
Reflection Refraction
  • Section 29.5Reflection of Sound

14
Reflection of Sound
  • An echo is reflected sound
  • Sound reflects from all surfaces of a room
  • Acoustics is the study of the way sound reflects
    off of objects in a room
  • Reverberations Multiple reflections of sound
    within a room
  • The walls of concert halls are designed to make
    the reflection of sound diffuse

15
Reflection of Sound
16
Reflection Refraction
  • Section 29.6Refraction

17
Refraction
  • Refraction the change in direction of a wave as
    it crosses the boundary between two media in
    which the wave travels at different speeds
  • Wave Fronts lines that represent the position
    of different crests
  • At each point along a wave front, the wave is
    moving perpendicular to the wave front
  • The direction of motion is best represented by a
    ray

18
Refraction
  • Incident Ray
  • Refracted Ray

Less Rigid Medium _________________ More
Rigid Medium Refracted ray bends toward the
normal
19
Refraction
  • When one medium ends and another begins, that is
    called a boundary.
  • When a wave encounters a boundary that is more
    dense, part of it is reflected and part of it is
    transmitted.
  • The frequency of the wave is not altered when
    crossing a barrier, but the speed and wavelength
    are.
  • The change in speed and wavelength can cause the
    wave to bend, if it hits the boundary at an angle
    other than 90.

20
Reflection Refraction
  • Section 29.7Refraction of Sound

21
Refraction of Sound
  • Sound waves are refracted when parts of a wave
    front travel at different speeds
  • This happens in uneven winds or temperatures
  • Sound waves tend to bend away from warm ground,
    since it travels faster in warmer air
  • On a cold night, the speed of sound is slower
    near the ground than above, so we can hear over
    larger distances

22
Refraction of Sound
23
Reflection Refraction
  • Section 29.8Refraction of Light

24
Refraction of Light
  • A pond or swimming pool may appear shallower than
    they actually are, a pencil in a glass of water
    will appear bent
  • All of these effects are caused by changes in the
    speed of light as it passes from one medium to
    another, or through varying temperatures and
    densities of the same medium which changes the
    directions of light rays
  • Index of Refraction (n) (speed of light in
    vacuum)/(speed of light in material)
  • Snells Law n sin ? n sin ? (where n and n
    are the indices of refraction of the media on
    either side of the boundary, and ? and ? are the
    respective angles of incidence and refraction)
  • Index of Refraction of a few substances
  • Vacuum 1.00 Crown glass 1.52
  • Air 1.0003 Quartz 1.52
  • Water 1.33 Diamond 2.42
  • Ethanol 1.36

25
Refraction of Light
The submerged object's apparent depth equals its
true depth divided by the liquid's index of
refraction d' d(n2/n1). Note n2 is the index
of refraction of the medium above the surface and
n1 is the index of refraction of the medium below
the surface.
  • Incident Ray
  • Refracted Ray

26
Refraction of Light
  • Figure 29.19
  • There are many effects of refraction
  • a. The apparent depth of the glass block is less
    than the real depth.
  • b. The fish appears to be nearer than it
    actually is.
  • c. The full glass mug appears to hold more root
    beer than it actually does.

27
Reflection Refraction
  • Section 29.9Atmospheric Refraction

28
Atmospheric Refraction
On hot days there may be a layer of very hot air
in contact with the ground, the light will travel
faster through this air and will bend, creating a
mirage
29
Atmospheric Refraction
  • When you watch the sun set, you can still see the
    sun for several minutes after it has sunk below
    the horizon, because light is refracted by
    Earths atmosphere

30
Reflection Refraction
  • Section 29.10Dispersion in a Prism

31
Dispersion in a Prism
  • Light of frequencies closer to the natural
    frequency of the electron oscillators in a medium
    travels more slowly in the medium
  • Since different frequencies of light travel at
    different speeds in transparent materials, they
    will refract differently and bend at different
    angles
  • When light is bent twice at nonparallel
    boundaries, as in a prism, the seperation of the
    different colors is apparent
  • Dispersion the separation of light into colors
    arranged according to their frequency

32
Dispersion in a Prism
33
Reflection Refraction
  • Section 29.11The Rainbow

34
The Rainbow
  • The rainbow takes the concept of dispersion and
    multiples it through the atmosphere
  • The sun shines on water droplets in a cloud or
    when it is raining
  • The light is dispersed by the raindrop into its
    spectral colors

35
The Rainbow
  • Dispersion by a Raindrop
  • Each droplet acts like a prism
  • Higher drops red is bent to the eye
  • Lower drops violet is bent to the eye

36
The Rainbow
  • Rainbows will always appear at an angle between
    40? and 42? . If you are lucky enough to see two
    rainbows at the same time, the second (much
    dimmer) one occurs above the main one, and
    results from sunlight creating a double
    reflection in the water droplets. The colors are
    also upside down.

37
Reflection Refraction
  • Section 29.12Total Internal Reflection.

38
Total Internal Reflection
  • Critical Angle
  • Figure 29.32
  • You can observe total internal reflection in your
    bathtub.
  • a-d) Light emitted in the water at angles below
    the critical angle is partly refracted and partly
    reflected at the surface.
  • e) At the critical angle, the emerging beam
    shims the surface.
  • f) Past the critical angle, there is total
    internal reflection.

39
Total Internal Reflection
  • Total Internal Reflection in Diamonds
  • The critical angle for a diamond is 24.6?,
    smaller than in other common substances. This
    small critical angle means that light inside is
    more likely to totally internally reflect.

40
Total Internal Reflection
  • Critical Angle the minimum angle of incidence
    for which a light ray is totally reflected within
    a medium
  • Total Internal Reflection the 100 reflection
    of light that strikes the boundary between two
    media at an angle greater than the critical angle
  • Optical fibers utilize the concept of total
    internal reflection to feed light from one
    location to another, these cables are very useful
    for communications

41
Total Internal Reflection
  • Optical Fibers
  • At each contact w/ the glass air interface, if
    the light hits at greater than the critical
    angle, it undergoes total internal reflection and
    stays in the fiber.
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