- In vacuum light always travels at the
same speed:
c = 3.0 x
108 m/s .
- Until the middle of the 1800's, the
generally accepted theory of light was the particle picture. In this
viewpoint, advocated by Newton, light was considered to be a stream of
tiny particles. However, in the late 1800's, the particle picture was
replaced by the wave theory of light. This was because certain
phenomena associated with light, namely refraction, diffraction and
interference, could only be explained using the wave picture.
- Visible light is just one particular
type of electromagnetic radiation. Other types of electromagnetic
radiation include radio waves, infrared radiation (heat), ultraviolet
radiation, x-rays and
-rays. The different types of radiation are distinguished by their
wavelength, or frequency, as shown in Fig. (22.1).
Figure 22.1:
The Electromagnetic Spectrum
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For example blue light has a wavelength (in vacuum) of
434 x 10- 9m = 434 nanometers (nm), while red
light has a wavelength of 768 nm. Radiation outside the visible
spectrum with wavelengths longer than red light is called infrared,
while radiation with wavelength shorter than blue is called
ultraviolet. The theory which accurately describes the wave-like
properties of all types of electromagnetic radiation is called Maxwell's
Theory of Electromagnetism.
- In the early 20th century, experiments
revealed that there were some phenomena associated with light that
could only be explained by a particle picture. Thus, light as it is
now understood, has attributes of both particles and waves. In this
Chapter we will deal mainly with the wave attributes of light. The
particle-like behaviour of light is described by the modern theory of
quantum mechanics, which will be described in Chapter 28.
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