Transcript
Page 1: Mirrors and Reflections

Homework Notes• If you are struggling with the homework, start

working on it early enough that you can come to office hours if needed.

• You can go to the help room even when one of us is not there, at least for the first half of the course.

• Do not email me Wednesday night with homework questions.

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Chapter 3: Mirrors and Lenses

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Chapter 3: Mirrors and Lenses

• Mirrors– Spherical mirrors– Ray tracing

• Convex mirrors– Image formation– Applications

• Concave mirrors– Image formation– Applications

• Lenses– Refraction– Converging rays– Diverging rays

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Reflection Review• Recall our ray tracing of a flat mirror• Recall that there are “special” rays that are

sufficient for locating the image

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Clicker Question• Which shows the correct location, orientation,

and size for the image?

A)

D) E)

C)B)

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Spherical Mirrors

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What is the normal to a curved surface and how is it used to find rays?

• To find the normal to a curved surface at a point where a ray hits that surface (and will be reflected or refracted)– First draw a tangent line to the curve

(or tangent plane to the surface)– The normal is perpendicular to that

line or plane and going through the point

– Once you have drawn the normal you can draw the reflected or refracted ray

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Ray Tracing & Spherical Mirrors

Radius of Curvature: The radius of the sphere the mirror is “cut from”

Center of Curvature (C): The center of the sphere the mirror is cut from

Focal Point (F): The point where rays from a distance appear to converge

For a spherical mirror, the focal point is halfway between the surface and the center of curvature

Paraxial Ray: A ray coming on to the mirror parallel to the axis

CF

radius of curvature

paraxial rays

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Convex vs. Concave

Convex Concave

• Spherical mirrors are drawn in two dimensions, so you have to imagine the 3D mirror this line represents

• Both convex and concave mirrors obey the same law of reflection, but they make different kinds of images

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Sources of Paraxial Rays• The rays coming from a distance source can be

considered approximately paraxial when they reach a mirror

Convex mirror

• The rays from a nearby source, such as a candle or bare light bulb, cannot be considered paraxial

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Special Rays: Convex Mirror

CFaxis

Ray 1 Rule: All rays incident parallel to the axis are reflected so that they appear to be coming from the focal point, F.

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Special Rays: Convex Mirror

CFaxis

Ray 2 Rule: All rays that (when extended) pass through C are reflected back on themselves

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Special Rays: Convex Mirror

CFaxis

Ray 3 Rule: All rays that (when extended) pass through F are reflected back parallel to the axis.

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Locating an Image: Convex Mirror

CFaxis

Image properties:•virtual (behind the mirror)•right-side up•closer to the mirror than the object•smaller than the object.

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Compare to Flat Mirror

Image properties:•virtual (behind the mirror)•upside down•the same distance from the mirror as the object•the same size as the object

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Clicker Question

• The image formed in a convex mirror is smaller than the object. This would make a convex mirror useful for which application?

A. Makeup or shaving mirrorB. Wide-angle mirror, such as on a car or a blind

intersectionC. A mirror in a clothing store dressing room

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Convex Mirrors• Because the image is smaller than the object,

convex mirrors reflect from wider angles than flat mirrors.

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Concave Mirrors

C Faxis

Ray 1 Rule: All rays incident parallel to the axis are reflected so that they pass through the focal point, F.

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C Faxis

Concave Mirrors

Ray 2 Rule: All rays that pass through C are reflected back on themselves

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Concave Mirrors

C Faxis

Ray 3 Rule: All rays that pass through F are reflected back parallel to the axis.

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Image Formation: Concave Mirrors

C F

Image properties:•real (in front of the mirror)•upside down•farther from the mirror than the object•larger than the object.

Object location: Between the center of curvature and the focal point

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Concave Mirrors

C F

Image properties:•virtual (behind the mirror)•right-side up•farther from the mirror than the object•larger than the object.

Object location: Between the surface and the focal point

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Concave Mirrors

C F

Object location: Past the center of curvature

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Concave Mirrors: Clicker Question

C F

Object location: Past the center of curvature

Is the image

A.Real and magnifiedB.Real and reducedC.Virtual and magnifiedD.Virtual and reduced

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Clicker Question

• The inside of a spoon bowl is a concave surface with a radius of curvature of a couple of inches (depending on the spoon). If you hold it about a foot from your face, what will your face look like?

A. Normal size, upside downB. Normal size, right side upC. Smaller, upside downD.Smaller, right side up

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Concave Mirrors: Application

Because rays coming in parallel, as from a very distant source, are all reflected to the focal point, a receiver placed there will pick up the waves received over the large area of the dish, instead of just the small area of the receiver itself.

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Concave Mirrors: Application• What if we put a light source at the

focal point of a concave mirror?• All the rays emitted by the light go

through the focal point, and are therefore reflected parallel to the axis of the mirror.

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Spherical Lenses

What if we don’t want to have to look at a reflection to magnify or reduce an image?We can use refractive optics instead (lenses)

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Convex Glass Surface

CFaxis

A concave surface is called “converging” because parallel rays converge towards one another

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Convex Glass Surface

C Faxis

The surface is converging for both air to glass rays and glass to air rays

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C Faxis

A concave surface is called “diverging” because parallel rays diverge away from one another

Concave Glass Surface

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CF axis

Again, the surface is diverging for both air to glass rays and glass to air rays

Concave Glass Surface


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