Total internal reflection
When
light crosses an interface into a medium with a higher index of refraction,
the light bends towards the normal. Conversely, light traveling across
an interface from higher n to lower n will bend away from the normal.
This has an interesting implication: at some angle, known as the critical
angle, light travelling from a medium with higher n to a medium with lower
n will be refracted at 90°; in other words, refracted along the interface.
If the light hits the interface at any angle larger than this critical
angle, it will not pass through to the second medium at all. Instead,
all of it will be reflected back into the first medium, a process known
as total internal reflection.
The critical angle can be found from
Snell's law, putting in an angle of 90° for the angle of the refracted
ray. This gives:
For any angle of incidence larger than the
critical angle, Snell's law will not be able to be solved for the angle of
refraction, because it will show that the refracted angle has a sine
larger than 1, which is not possible. In that case all the light is
totally reflected off the interface, obeying the law of reflection.
Optical fibers are based entirely on this
principle of total internal reflection. An optical fiber is a flexible
strand of glass. A fiber optic cable is usually made up of many of these
strands, each carrying a signal made up of pulses of laser light. The
light travels along the optical fiber, reflecting off the walls of the
fiber. With a straight or smoothly bending fiber, the light will hit the
wall at an angle higher than the critical angle and will all be reflected
back into the fiber. Even though the light undergoes a large number of
reflections when traveling along a fiber, no light is lost.
Depth perception
Because light is refracted at interfaces,
objects you see across an interface appear to be shifted relative to where
they really are. If you look straight down at an object at the bottom of a
glass of water, for example, it looks closer to you than it really is.
Looking perpendicular to an interface, the apparent depth is related to
the actual depth by:
An example
A beam of light travels from water into a
piece of diamond in the shape of a triangle, as shown in the diagram.
Step-by-step, follow the beam until it emerges from the piece of diamond.
(a) How fast is the light traveling inside
the piece of diamond?
The speed can be calculated from the index
of refraction:
(b) What is
, the angle between the normal and the beam of light inside the diamond
at the water-diamond interface?
A diagram helps for this. In fact, let's
look at the complete diagram of the whole path, and use this for the rest
of the questions.
The angle we need can be found from Snell's
law:
(c) The beam travels up to the air-diamond
interface. What is , the angle
between the normal and the beam of light inside the diamond at the air-diamond
interface?
This is found using a bit of geometry. All
you need to know is that the sum of the three angles inside a triangle is
180°. If
is 24.9°, this means that the third angle in that triangle must be 25.1°.
So:
(d) What is the critical angle for the
diamond-air interface?
(e) What happens to the light at the
diamond-air interface?
Because the angle of incidence (64.9°) is
larger than the critical angle, the light is totally reflected internally.
(f) The light is reflected off the
interface, obeying the law of reflection. It then strikes the
diamond-water interface. What happens to it here?
Again, the place to start is by determining
the angle of incidence,
. A little geometry shows that:
The critical angle at this interface is :
Because the angle of incidence is less than
the critical angle, the beam will escape from the piece of diamond here.
The angle of refraction can be found from Snell's law:
Lenses
There are many similarities between lenses
and mirrors. The mirror equation, relating focal length and the image and
object distances for mirrors, is the same as the lens equation used for
lenses.There are also some differences, however; the most important being
that with a mirror, light is reflected, while with a lens an image is
formed by light that is refracted by, and transmitted through, the lens.
Also, lenses have two focal points, one on each side of the lens.
The surfaces of lenses, like spherical
mirrors, can be treated as pieces cut from spheres. A lens is double
sided, however, and the two sides may or may not have the same curvature.
A general rule of thumb is that when the lens is thickest in the center,
it is a converging lens, and can form real or virtual images. When the
lens is thickest at the outside, it is a diverging lens, and it can only
form virtual images.
Consider first a converging lens, the most
common type being a double convex lens. As with mirrors, a ray diagram
should be drawn to get an idea of where the image is and what the image
characteristics are. Drawing a ray diagram for a lens is very similar to
drawing one for a mirror. The parallel ray is drawn the same way, parallel
to the optic axis, and through (or extended back through) the focal point.
The chief difference in the ray diagram is with the chief ray. That is
drawn from the tip of the object straight through the center of the lens.
Wherever the two rays meet is where the image is. The third ray, which can
be used as a check, is drawn from the tip of the object through the focal
point that is on the same side of the lens as the object. That ray travels
through the lens, and is refracted so it travels parallel to the optic
axis on the other side of the lens.
The two sides of the lens are referred to
as the object side (the side where the object is) and the image side. For
lenses, a positive image distance means that the image is real and is on
the image side. A negative image distance means the image is on the same
side of the lens as the object; this must be a virtual image.
Using that sign convention gives a lens
equation identical to the spherical mirror equation:
The other signs work the same way as for
mirrors. The focal length, f, is positive for a converging lens, and
negative for a diverging lens.
The magnification factor is also given by
the same equation:
Useful devices like microscopes and
telescopes rely on at least two lenses (or mirrors). A microscope, for
example, is a compound lens system with two converging lenses. One
important thing to note is that with two lenses (and you can extend the
argument for more than two), the magnification factor m for the two lens
system is the product of the two individual magnification factors.
It works this way. The first lens takes an
object and creates an image at a particular point, with a certain
magnification factor (say, 3 times as large). The second lens uses the
image created by the first lens as the object, and creates a final image,
introducing a second magnification factor (say, a factor of seven). The
magnification factor of the final image compared to the original object is
the product of the two magnification factors (3 x 7 = 21, in this case).
Ray diagram for a diverging lens
Consider now the ray diagram for a
diverging lens. Diverging lenses come in a few different shapes, but all
diverging lens are fatter on the edge than they are in the center. A good
example of a diverging lens is a bi-concave lens, as shown in the diagram.
The object in this case is beyond the focal point, and, as usual, the
place where the refracted rays appear to diverge from is the location of
the image. A diverging lens always gives a virtual image, because the
refracted rays have to be extended back to meet.
Note that a diverging lens will refract
parallel rays so that they diverge from each other, while a converging
lens refracts parallel rays toward each other.
An example
We can use the ray diagram above to do an
example. If the focal length of the diverging lens is -12.0 cm (f is
always negative for a diverging lens), and the object is 22.0 cm from the
lens and 5.0 cm tall, where is the image and how tall is it?
Working out the image distance using the
lens equation gives:
This can be rearranged to:
The negative sign signifies that the image
is virtual, and on the same side of the lens as the object. This is
consistent with the ray diagram.
The magnification of the lens for this
object distance is:
So the image has a height of 5 x 0.35 =
1.75 cm.
Multiple lenses
Many useful devices, such as microscopes
and telescopes, use more than one lens to form images. To analyze any
system with more than one lens, work in steps. Each lens takes an object
and creates an image. The original object is the object for the first
lens, and that creates an image. That image is the object for the second
lens, and so on. We won't use more than two lenses, and we can do a couple
of examples to see how you analyze problems like this.
A microscope
A basic microscope is made up of two
converging lenses. One reason for using two lenses rather than just one is
that it's easier to get higher magnification. If you want an overall
magnification of 35, for instance, you can use one lens to magnify by a
factor of 5, and the second by a factor of 7. This is generally easier to
do than to get magnification by a factor of 35 out of a single lens.
A microscope arrangement is shown below,
along with the ray diagram showing how the first lens creates a real
image. This image is the object for the second lens, and the image created
by the second lens is the one you'd see when you looked through the
microscope.
Note that the final image is virtual, and
is inverted compared to the original object. This is true for many types
of microscopes and telescopes, that the image produced is inverted
compared to the object.
Sign convention
The sign convention for lenses is similar
to that for mirrors. Again, take the side of the lens where the object is
to be the positive side. Because a lens transmits light rather than
reflecting it like a mirror does, the other side of the lens is the
positive side for images. In other words, if the image is on the far side
of the lens as the object, the image distance is positive and the image is
real. If the image and object are on the same side of the lens, the image
distance is negative and the image is virtual.
For converging mirrors, the focal length is
positive. Similarly, a converging lens always has a positive f, and a
diverging lens has a negative f.
The signs associated with magnification
also work the same way for lenses and mirrors. A positive magnification
corresponds to an upright image, while a negative magnification
corresponds to an inverted image. As usual, upright and inverted are taken
relative to the orientation of the object.
Note that in certain cases involving more
than one lens the object distance can be negative. This occurs when the
image from the first lens lies on the far side of the second lens; that
image is the object for the second lens, and is called a virtual object.
An example using the microscope
Let's use the ray diagram for the
microscope and work out a numerical example. The parameters we need to
specify are:
To work out the image distance for the
image formed by the objective lens, use the lens equation, rearranged to:
The magnification of the image in the
objective lens is:
So the height of the image is -1.8 x 1.0 =
-1.8 mm.
This image is the object for the second
lens, and the object distance has to be calculated:
The image, virtual in this case, is located
at a distance of:
The magnification for the eyepiece is:
So the height of the final image is -1.8 mm
x 3.85 = -6.9 mm.
The overall magnification of the two lens
system is:
This is equal to the final height divided
by the height of the object, as it should be. Note that, applying the sign
conventions, the final image is virtual, and inverted compared to the
object. This is consistent with the ray diagram. |