Themes > Science > Physics > Atomic Physics > The Nature of Light

  • The invention of the LASER is one of the most significant developments in science and engineering
  • To enable us to understand and appreciate the operation of this unique device requires
    • an understanding of the behaviour and the properties of light itself
  • Light is the medium by which we carry information through an optical system
    • our immediate task is to ask ourselves
      • what is light?
      • what are its origins?
  • Light is not the easiest of natural phenomena to describe
    • for many centuries, scientists have debated, and argued over, the nature of light
    • we will not take part in this debate but will try to present a description of light which will satisfy our working needs
  • To understand the operation of the LASER and other light sources, we need to appreciate the unique character of the light emitted from gases and solids
    • all radiating bodies when viewed by the naked eye appear to possess a characteristic colour:
      • sunlight is white
      • a piece of hot iron may be orange-red
      • a sodium street lamp is yellow
    • If the light from any of these sources is passed through a prism it spreads out in a series of component colours known as a SPECTRUM
      • sunlight appears as a continuous band of colours ranging from red through to violet
      • a piece of iron also shows a continuum from dull red to orange
      • a sodium lamp displays a series of bright, narrow lines
    • whether the spectral distribution is a CONTINUOUS SPECTRUM or in DISCRETE SPECTRAL LINES depends on
      • the nature of the source
      • the temperature of the source
  • To completely describe the properties of light requires us to adopt two different models of behaviour:
    • the ELECTROMAGNETIC WAVE model
    • the PHOTON model


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