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Chapter 14: Light and Reflection The Sombrero Galaxy (www.nasaimages.org)

Chapter 14: Light and Reflection The Sombrero Galaxy (nasaimages)

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Chapter 14: Light and Reflection The Sombrero Galaxy (www.nasaimages.org). Electromagnetic Waves. What’s comes to mind when you think of the word light? Generally people only think about sources that produce light that is visible to humans. What is light?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chapter 14: Light and Reflection The Sombrero Galaxy (nasaimages)

Chapter 14: Light and Reflection

The Sombrero Galaxy

(www.nasaimages.org)

Page 2: Chapter 14: Light and Reflection The Sombrero Galaxy (nasaimages)

Electromagnetic Waves

• What’s comes to mind when you think of the word light?

• Generally people only think about sources that produce light that is visible to humans

Page 3: Chapter 14: Light and Reflection The Sombrero Galaxy (nasaimages)

What is light?

• Light waves are electromagnetic waves– Remember that electromagnetic waves do not

need a medium to propagate

• Electromagnetic Wave: A transverse wave consisting of oscillating electric and magnetic fields at right angles to each other.

Page 4: Chapter 14: Light and Reflection The Sombrero Galaxy (nasaimages)

EM Waves

Page 5: Chapter 14: Light and Reflection The Sombrero Galaxy (nasaimages)

There’s more than what the eye can see

• Not all light is visible to the human eye

• The complete electromagnetic spectrum contains many different types of radiation

Page 6: Chapter 14: Light and Reflection The Sombrero Galaxy (nasaimages)
Page 7: Chapter 14: Light and Reflection The Sombrero Galaxy (nasaimages)

The electromagnetic spectrum

Page 8: Chapter 14: Light and Reflection The Sombrero Galaxy (nasaimages)

Remembering the Spectrum

• Rabbits Mate In Very Unusual Expensive Gardens• Red Martians Invaded Venus Using X-Ray Guns• From Longest Wavelength to Shortest Wavelength:

Radio, Microwave, Infrared, Visible, Ultraviolet, X-Ray, Gamma Ray

Page 9: Chapter 14: Light and Reflection The Sombrero Galaxy (nasaimages)

Why can’t we see the other parts of the EM spectrum?

• The Sun’s surface is brightest in the portion of the spectrum that is visible to humans

http://apollo.lsc.vsc.edu/classes/met130/notes/chapter2/plank_e_sun.html

Page 10: Chapter 14: Light and Reflection The Sombrero Galaxy (nasaimages)

Does the Sun emit more than visible light radiation?

X Rays

Infrared

White Light

Microwave/Radio

UltravioletUltraviolet

http://sohowww.nascom.nasa.gov/

Page 11: Chapter 14: Light and Reflection The Sombrero Galaxy (nasaimages)

The Milky Way

Page 12: Chapter 14: Light and Reflection The Sombrero Galaxy (nasaimages)

Galaxy M101 Across the Spectrum

Page 13: Chapter 14: Light and Reflection The Sombrero Galaxy (nasaimages)

All EM waves travel at the speed of light

• Speed of light in a vacuum: c= 3.00 x 108 m/s

• Speed of light = frequency x wavelength

fc

Page 14: Chapter 14: Light and Reflection The Sombrero Galaxy (nasaimages)

Brightness

• Brightness at any point is the power per unit area at that point (like sound intensity)

• Brightness decreases by the square of the distance from the source– i.e. if you move an object twice as far away

from a light source, one-fourth as much light falls on it

Page 15: Chapter 14: Light and Reflection The Sombrero Galaxy (nasaimages)

How bright?

• Let’s pretend that a person is looking at a candle that is 1 m away from her. If the candle were move to a distance of 3 m away, how would the brightness change?– The candle would be 1/9 as bright

Page 16: Chapter 14: Light and Reflection The Sombrero Galaxy (nasaimages)

Section 14.2: Flat Mirrors

• Reflection: The turning back of an electromagnetic wave at the surface of a substance

Page 17: Chapter 14: Light and Reflection The Sombrero Galaxy (nasaimages)

Enceladus(Moon of Saturn)

• Reflects ~ 99% of EM waves

Page 18: Chapter 14: Light and Reflection The Sombrero Galaxy (nasaimages)

Iapetus (Moon of Saturn)

• Light regions: Reflect 50-60% of EM Waves

• Dark Regions: Reflect 2-5% of EM Waves

Page 19: Chapter 14: Light and Reflection The Sombrero Galaxy (nasaimages)

Reflection

• The texture of a surface affects how it reflects light

• Diffuse Reflection: Rough, textured surfaces reflect light in many different directions

• Specular Reflection: Smooth, shiny surfaces (i.e. water) reflect light in one direction

Page 20: Chapter 14: Light and Reflection The Sombrero Galaxy (nasaimages)

Specular vs Diffuse Reflection

Specular Reflection Diffuse Reflection

•When the book says reflection, it means specular reflection

Page 21: Chapter 14: Light and Reflection The Sombrero Galaxy (nasaimages)

Basic Reflection

• Angle of Incidence (θ) = Angle of Reflection (θ’)

Page 22: Chapter 14: Light and Reflection The Sombrero Galaxy (nasaimages)

Angles

Angle of Incidence: (θ) The angle between the incoming light ray and the line perpendicular to the surface

Angle of Reflection: (θ’) The angle between the reflected light ray and the line perpendicular to the surface

Page 23: Chapter 14: Light and Reflection The Sombrero Galaxy (nasaimages)

Flat Mirrors

• Flat Mirrors are the simplest type of mirror

• When an object is placed in front of a flat mirror, light rays will spread out from the object and reflect from the mirror’s surface

• Virtual Image: An image formed by light rays that only appear to intersect

Page 24: Chapter 14: Light and Reflection The Sombrero Galaxy (nasaimages)

Flat (Plane) Mirror Images

• The image produced is upright

• The image is the same size as the object (i.e., the magnification is m = 1)

• The image is the same distance from the mirror as the object appears to be (i.e., the image distance = the object distance)

• The image is a virtual image