Chapter 32: Problem 41
Use Fermat's Principle to derive the law of reflection.
Chapter 32: Problem 41
Use Fermat's Principle to derive the law of reflection.
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Get started for freeFermat's Principle, from which geometric optics can be derived, states that light travels by a path that minimizes the time of travel between the points. Consider a light beam that travels a horizontal distance \(D\) and a vertical distance \(h\), through two large flat slabs of material, with a vertical interface between the materials. One material has a thickness \(D / 2\) and index of refraction \(n_{1},\) and the second material has a thickness \(D / 2\) and index of refraction \(n_{2} .\) Determine the equation involving the indices of refraction and angles from horizontal that the light makes at the interface \(\left(\theta_{1}\right.\) and \(\theta_{2}\) ) which minimize the time for this travel.
A solar furnace uses a large parabolic mirror (mirrors several stories high have been constructed) to focus the light of the Sun to heat a target. A large solar furnace can melt metals. Is it possible to attain temperatures exceeding \(6000 \mathrm{~K}\) (the temperature of the photo sphere of the Sun) in a solar furnace? How, or why not?
Answer as true or false with an explanation for the following: The wavelength of He-Ne laser light in water is less than its wavelength in the air. (The refractive index of water is \(1.33 .\)
Among the instruments Apollo astronauts left on the Moon were reflectors used to bounce laser beams back to Earth. These made it possible to measure the distance from the Earth to the Moon with unprecedented precision (uncertainties of a few centimeters out of \(384,000 \mathrm{~km}\) ), for the study both of celestial mechanics and of plate tectonics on Earth. The reflectors consisted not of ordinary mirrors, but of arrays of corner cubes, each consisting of three square plane mirrors fixed perpendicular to each other, as adjacent faces of a cube. Why? Explain the function and advantages of this design.
You are under water in a pond and look up at the smooth surface of the water, noticing the sun in the sky. Is the sun in fact higher in the sky than it appears to you while under water, or is it lower?
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