electromagnetic radiation light and color. key question: what are some useful properties of light?...

49
Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR

Upload: bertha-casey

Post on 13-Jan-2016

213 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

Electromagnetic Radiation

LIGHT AND COLOR

Page 2: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

Key Question:What are some useful properties of light?

PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

Page 3: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

Light travels almost unimaginably fast and far.Light carries energy and information.Light travels in straight lines.Light bounces and bends when it comes in

contact with objects. Light has color.Light has different intensities, it can be bright or

dim.

PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

Page 4: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

Light is a form of energy that travels.The intensity of light is the power per

square meter falling on a surface.Most light sources distribute their light

equally in all directions, making a spherical pattern.

Because light spreads out in a sphere, the intensity decreases the farther you get from the source.

LIGHT CARRIES ENERGY AND POWER

Page 5: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

The intensity of light from a small source follows an inverse square law because its intensity diminishes as the square of the distance.

LIGHT INTENSITY

Page 6: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

The fiber-optic networks you read about are pipelines for information carried by light.

LIGHT CARRIES INFORMATION

Page 7: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

In some cities, a fiber-optic cable comes directly into homes and apartments carrying telephone, television, and Internet signals.

LIGHT CARRIES INFORMATION

Page 8: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

The speed of light is so important in physics that it is given its own symbol, a lower case c.

The best accepted experimental measurement for the speed of light in air is 299,792,500 m/sec.

For most purposes, we do not need to be this accurate and may use a value for c of 3 × 108 m/sec.

THE SPEED OF LIGHT

Page 9: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

Albert Michelson

The most famous experiment measuring the speed of light was performed by the American physicist Albert Michelson in 1880.

• Light was directed by a lens to an octagonal mirror.• A beam of light was reflected to a stationary mirror on a

mountain 35 km away and then reflected back.• The distance was known, so Michelson had to find only the

time it took to make a round trip.

The Speed of Light

Page 10: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

• When the mirror was spun, short bursts of light reached the stationary mirror and were reflected back to the spinning octagonal mirror.

• If the rotating mirror made one-eighth rotation while the light made the trip, the mirror reflected light to the observer.

• If the mirror was rotated too slowly or too quickly, it would not be in a position to reflect light.

The Speed of Light

Page 11: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

a. Light is reflected back to the eyepiece when the mirror is at rest.

The Speed of Light

Page 12: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

a. Light is reflected back to the eyepiece when the mirror is at rest.

b. Reflected light fails to enter the eyepiece when the mirror spins too slowly . . .

The Speed of Light

Page 13: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

a. Light is reflected back to the eyepiece when the mirror is at rest.

b. Reflected light fails to enter the eyepiece when the mirror spins too slowly . . .

c. . . . or too fast.

The Speed of Light

Page 14: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

a. Light is reflected back to the eyepiece when the mirror is at rest.

b. Reflected light fails to enter the eyepiece when the mirror spins too slowly . . .

c. . . . or too fast.

d. When the mirror rotates at the correct speed, light reaches the eyepiece.

The Speed of Light

Page 15: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

Michelson timed a light beam as it traveled from one mountain to another and back again. His experiment measured the speed of light more accurately than it had been measured before.

The Speed of Electromagnetic Waves

Mt. San Antonio

Mt. Wilson

Light Source

Telescope35.4 km

Mirror

Octagonal Rotating Mirror

Page 16: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

Light has been studied for thousands of years.

Some ancient Greek philosophers thought that light consists of tiny particles, which enter the eye to create the sensation of vision.

Others thought that vision resulted from streamers or filaments emitted by the eye making contact with an object.

Early Concepts of Light

Page 17: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

Evidence for the Wave ModelA beam of light passes first through a single slit and then through a double slit.

•Where light from the two slits reaches a darkened screen, there are alternating bright and dark bands.

•The bands are evidence that the light produces an interference pattern.

•Interference occurs only when two or more waves overlap.

Wave or Particle?

Page 18: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

When light passes through a single slit and then a double slit, it produces an interference pattern.

Wave or Particle?

Light source

Card with one slit

Card with two slits

Interference pattern appears on screen.

Light from single slit produces coherent light at second card.

Bright bands show constructive interference.

Dark bands show destructive interference.

Page 19: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

Evidence for the Particle ModelWhen dim blue light hits the surface of a metal such as cesium, an electron is emitted. A brighter blue light causes even more electrons to be emitted.Red light, no matter how bright it is, does not cause the emission of any electrons from this particular metal.

Wave or Particle?

Page 20: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

A. Red light or infrared rays, no matter how bright, does not cause electrons to be emitted from this metal surface.

B. When blue light or ultraviolet rays strike the metal surface, electrons are emitted, even if the light is dim.

Wave or Particle?

Bright red light

or infrared

rays

Metal plate

Dim blue

light or ultraviolet rays

Metal plate

No electrons are emitted.

Electrons are emitted.

Page 21: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

The emission of electrons from a metal caused by light striking the metal is called the photoelectric effect. In 1905, Albert Einstein (1879–1955) proposed that light, and all electromagnetic radiation, consists of packets of energy. These packets of electromagnetic energy are now called photons.

Wave or Particle?

Page 22: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

Key Question:How does light fit

into the atomic theory of matter?

PHOTONS AND ATOMS

Page 23: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

Just like matter is made of tiny particles called atoms, light energy comes in tiny bundles called photons.

White light is a mixture of photons with a wide range of colors (energies).

PHOTONS AND ATOMS

Page 24: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

Intensity measures power per unit area. There are two ways to make light of high

intensity. One way is to have high- energy photons. A second way is to have a lot of photons even if they are low-energy.

PHOTONS AND INTENSITY

The number and energy of photons determine the intensity of the light.

Page 25: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

Intensity is the rate at which a wave’s energy flows through a given unit of area. A wave model also explains how intensity decreases.

•As waves travel away from the source, they pass through a larger and larger area.

•The total energy does not change, so the wave’s intensity decreases.

Intensity

Page 26: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

The closer you are to a surface when you spray paint it, the smaller the area the paint covers, and the more intense the paint color looks.

Intensity

Page 27: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

Electromagnetic waves are transverse waves consisting of changing electric fields and changing magnetic fields.

•Like mechanical waves, electromagnetic waves carry energy from place to place.

•Electromagnetic waves differ from mechanical waves in how they are produced and how they travel.

What Are Electromagnetic Waves?

Page 28: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

How They Are ProducedElectromagnetic waves are produced by constantly changing electric fields and magnetic fields.

•An electric field in a region of space exerts electric forces on charged particles. Electric fields are produced by electrically charged particles and by changing magnetic fields.

•A magnetic field in a region of space produces magnetic forces. Magnetic fields are produced by magnets, by changing electric fields, and by vibrating charges.

What Are Electromagnetic Waves?

Page 29: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

Electromagnetic waves are transverse waves because the fields are at right angles to the direction in which the wave travels.

What Are Electromagnetic Waves?

Page 30: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

How They TravelChanging electric fields produce changing magnetic fields, and changing magnetic fields produce changing electric fields, so the fields regenerate each other.

•Electromagnetic waves do not need a medium.•The transfer of energy by electromagnetic waves traveling through matter or across space is called electromagnetic radiation.

What Are Electromagnetic Waves?

Page 31: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

The full range of frequencies of electromagnetic radiation is called the electromagnetic spectrum.

•Visible light is the only part of the electromagnetic spectrum that you can see, but it is just a small part.

•Each kind of wave is characterized by a range of wavelengths and frequencies. All of these waves have many useful applications.

The Waves of the Spectrum

Page 32: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

The electromagnetic spectrum consists of radio waves, infrared rays, visible light, ultraviolet rays, X-rays, and gamma rays.

The Waves of the Spectrum

Page 33: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

Visible light is a small part of the energy range of electromagnetic waves.

The whole range is called the electromagnetic spectrum and visible light is in the middle of it.

WAVES OF THE ELECTROMAGNETIC SPECTRUM

Page 34: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

Key Question:How do we see color?

COLOR AND VISION

Page 35: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

When all the colors of the rainbow are combined, we do not see any particular color.

We see light without any color. We call this combination of all the colors of

light "white light".

COLOR AND VISION

Page 36: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

We can think of different colors of light like balls with different kinetic energies.

Blue light has a higher energy than green light, like the balls that make it into the top window.

Red light has the lowest energy, like the balls that can only make it to the lowest window.

COLOR AND VISION

Page 37: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

The retina in the back of the eye contains photoreceptors.

These receptors release chemical signals.

Chemical signals travel to the brain along the optic nerve.

HOW THE HUMAN EYE SEES COLOR

optic nerve

Page 38: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

Cones respond to three colors: red, green and blue.

Rods detect intensity of light: black, white, shades of gray.

PHOTORECEPTORS IN THE EYE

Page 39: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

Which chemical signal gets sent depends on how much energy the light has.

If the brain gets a signal from ONLY green cones, we see green.

HOW WE SEE COLORS

Page 40: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

The three color receptors in the eye allow us to see millions of different colors.

The additive primary colors are red, green, and blue.

We don’t see everything white because the strength of the signal matters.

All the different shades of color we can see are made by changing the proportions of red, green, and blue.

HOW WE SEE OTHER COLORS

Page 41: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

When we see an object, the light that reaches our eyes can come from two different processes:

1. The light can be emitted directly from the object, like a light bulb or glow stick. These are called luminous objects

2. The light can come from somewhere else, like the sun, and we see the objects by reflected light. These objects are illuminated.

HOW WE SEE THE COLOR OF THINGS

Page 42: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

Colored fabrics and paints get color from a subtractive process.

Chemicals, known as pigments, in the dyes and paints absorb some colors and allow the color you actually see to be reflected.

Magenta, yellow, and cyan are the three subtractive primary colors.

HOW WE SEE THE COLOR OF THINGS

Page 43: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT
Page 44: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

Plants absorb energy from light and convert it to chemical energy in the form of sugar (food for the plant).

Chlorophyll is an important molecule that absorbs blue and red light.

WHY ARE PLANTS GREEN?

Page 45: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

Televisions give off light.To make color with a TV, you can use red, green,

and blue (RGB) directly.

HOW DOES A COLOR TV WORK?

The screen is made of tiny red, green, and blue dots.

The dots are called pixels and each pixel gives off its own light.

TV sets can mix the three colors to get millions of different colors.

Page 46: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

When light moves through a material it travels in straight lines.

When light rays travel from one material to another, the rays may reflect.

The light that appears to bounce off the surface of an object is shown by a reflected ray.

REFLECTION AND REFRACTION

Page 47: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

Objects that are in front of a mirror appear as if they are behind the mirror.

This is because light rays are reflected by the mirror.

Your brain perceives the light as if it always traveled in a straight line.

REFLECTION AND REFRACTION

Page 48: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

The light that bends as it crosses a surface into a material refracts and is shown as a refracted ray.

REFLECTION AND REFRACTION

Page 49: Electromagnetic Radiation LIGHT AND COLOR. Key Question: What are some useful properties of light? PROPERTIES AND SOURCES OF LIGHT

Another example of refraction of light is the twinkling of a star in the night sky

As starlight travels from space into the Earth’s atmosphere, the rays are refracted.

Since the atmosphere is constantly changing, the amount of refraction also changes.

REFLECTION AND REFRACTION