11.3 reflection refraction diffraction and polarisation Flashcards
When does reflection occur in waves ?
What important to remmeber
What doesn’t change
Reflection occurs when a wave changes direction at a boundary between two different media, BUT REMAINS IN SAME MEDIUM
Also wavelength frequency don’t change
Angle of reflection
Law of reflection = angle of incidence = angle of reflection
Draw normal and it’s between the normal and incident ray, NOT THE MEDIUM
Wave front basics
“Peak” of Esch wave represented,
- all in phase
- distance between waves is equal to wavelength
Refraction - what is it
What always happens when a wave refracts
Why does it happen
What does it mean for wavelength
?
Refraction occurs when a wave changes direction due to changing speed when it passes from one medium to another
- whenever a wave refracts, some of it will have PARTISLLY RELFECTED FIRST
2) one medium to other changes speed, meaning wavelentgh will change and thus it moves. If it speeds = away , slows = towards
Important mediums to know speed differences for sound, water and em
So how will refraction affect water from deep to shallow in wavefronts?
) deep water is faster than shallow , sound is faster in denser too. Other then thst EM WAVES slows in denser
When a wave slows down, wavelength decrease
2) here the wavelength will decrease as speed decreases too
Why does resolution get affected at certain magnifications for light microscopes ?
(bio)
- at huge magnifications the image gets blurry due to SPREADING of light = diffraction
- this because light gets diffracted as it passes through apertures in the microscope
- cannot be avoided, so microscopes that dont need light were made
what is diffraction
anything change during diffraction ?
Property where when waves pass through a gap or travel around an obstacle, they SPREAD out.
- All waves can be diffracted, SPEED WL or FREQUENCY DONT CHANGE when diffraction occurs
What makes a wave diffract more?
how much a wave diffracts depends on the wavelength relative to the gap/ obstacle + narrower the gap the better
- sound can diffract around a door because wavelength of sound is about the same as the gap- meaning you can hear around the corner
- but light cant , need very small gap so diffraction is more.
what is Polarisation ?
which type of progressive wave can do it?
In terms of EM waves what does it refer to
polarisation is to make particles oscillate in one direction only, so thst the wave is confined to single planes
X for EM, it’s the plane of E WAVE
- thus property of transverse waves : longtidunal waves cant be
polarised as they already in same plane as energy transfer
what is the plane of polarisation of an electromagnetic wave?
EM waves are polarised in the Y AXIS, so the plane in which electric fields vibrate in.
how can waves be polarised then? (come back to this)
2
= through absorbtion (to do with polaroid filters)
= or reflection (glare and sunglasses), here partially polarisation happens, like off water, most becomes horizontally alligned
?
how can a polaroid filter polarise waves?
->what is important about directions of railings
-Filament lamp output unpolarised light planes
- For a filter that polarises it in the Y axis, the alinement of railings MUST BE HORIZONTAL.
->
this because a vertical wave hitting vertical (or horizontal hitting horizontal) WILL BE ABSORBED, as the waves make electrons delocalised go up and down CREATING A PD, meaning it is absorbed and now the wave wont go through
- however if vertical wave hit horizontal aligned, then there is not eniough space for delocalised electrons to move and create a PD, thus wave CSN GO THROUGH
But what does the allignment of a polaroid filter mean even considering previous knowledge about orientation of the railings?
if a polaroid filter is vertically alligned, it will allow vertical through, or polarise in the VERTICAL filter.
light is then polarised only in that plane
here the railings are still horizontal tho
in a polaroid filter, does it only allow if its perfectly Alligned??
what happens to intensity from unpolarised in ALL directions to just one !
NO
- BUT THE COMPONENTS in the same plane as its ALLIGNMENT OF ALL THE WAVES
- therefore some of the waves will be polarised but with less intensity
inetnsity drops by half
what determines the intensity when a wave gets polarised? (how much gets transmitted?)(check with sir)
Inetnsity is PROPORTIONAL TO cos ^2 (angle)
As intensity is proportional to amplitude squared