C17 Light
C17 Light
C17 Light
Cheetah
Garden 31.0 m/s
snail
Sound in air
Light inin
vacuum Jetplane
Earth
330 m/s orbit 0.04m/s
350 m/s
Space shuttle
300,000,000 m/s
around the Sun
7,780 m/s
29,780 m/s
How does light travel?
• Light travels in straight lines.
Experiment 1: How do we know light travels in straight
lines?
Now,
Look try looking
at the flame of a
through a bent hose.
candle through a
The lighthose.
straight from the
You
candle
shouldcannot
be ablereach
to see
your eyes.
the light This shows
through the
that light does not
hose.
bend, but travels in
straight lines.
How does light travel?
• Since light travels in straight lines,
shadows have the same shape as the
object blocking the light.
• If light did not travel in straight lines, it
would go round all objects and cast no
shadow.
Rays and beams
• We can trace the path of light from a source by
drawing straight lines to join one point to another.
• Such lines are called light rays.
• A bundle of light rays is known as a beam of light.
• Beams of light can be parallel, divergent or
convergent.
A parallel beam
Reflected
of light
images
staysare very
parallel after
clear
regular
on a reflection.
smooth surface.
17.2 Reflection
• If the surface is rough such as the surface of a sheet of
paper, irregular reflection occurs.
• The surface can be seen but no reflected images are
seen in it.
• For example, when light shines on the paper, no
reflected image is formed although light is reflected.
• Convex mirrors
o Mirrors that bend outwards are called
convex mirrors.
o The back of a spoon is an example.
Side-view mirrors of cars are sometimes
convex mirrors.
o Convex mirrors cover a wider field of vision,
and the images formed are distorted and
smaller.
17.3 Refraction
• Light bends when a light ray travels
from one medium to another medium
of different density (such as from air
to water).
• This bending of light is known
as refraction.
17.3 Refraction
• When light travels from air to glass, it gets refracted.
glass block
Normal
Green
Cyan
Yellow
White
Blue Red
Magenta
17.5 Colours
• We can see the colour of an object as it reflects that
colour into our eyes.
• When white light falls on a green object, the object
absorbs all other colours and reflects only green light.
• This is the case for the leaves of the strawberries below.
• The strawberries appear red because they absorb all
other colours except red.
White Green White Red
17.5 Colours
Experiment 3: Coloured light
Take three different coloured balls: red, blue and green.
Let us see what happens to these coloured balls under
different colours of light.
When redwhite
light
light
is is
shone
shone onon
thethese
balls,
balls,the
only each
redball
ballwill
willreflect
reflecttheir
the red
respective
light. The green
colours.andThis
blueisballs
because
white light
appear black
contains
since they
all the
can
colours
only of
the spectrum.
reflect green and blue light
respectively.
17.5 Colours
Experiment 3: Coloured light
What happens when a yellow ball is used in this
experiment?
But if red
Under white
lightlight,
is shone
a yellow
on the
ball
appears
yellow ball,
yellow
it appears red.
Yellow is a secondary colour, which
consists of red and green. Thus,
a yellow ball can reflect both red
and green light.
Miscellaneous
• http://science.howstuffworks.com/light.htm
• http://www.colorado.edu/physics/2000/wav
es_particles/lightspeed_evidence.html
• http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reflection_(phy
sics)
• http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Refraction
• http://demonstrations.wolfram.com/Dispersi
onOfLightThroughAPrism/
• http://www.fi.edu/color/