Light, Optics, and Vision Correction

L 31 Light and Optics-3
Images formed by mirrors
plane mirrors
curved mirrors
Concave (converging)
Convex (diverging)
Images formed by lenses
the human eye
correcting vision problems
nearsightedness
farsightedness
astigmatism
depth perception
 
PLANE
1
Review-Law of reflection
angle of incidence  =  angle of reflection
2
 
Each segment of a curved mirror is a plane mirror.
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Review
3
Image formation with lenses
converging lens
(positive lens)
diverging lens
(negative lens)
the human eye
correcting for
nearsightedness
correcting for
farsightedness
optical instruments
lenses are relatively
simple optical devices
the principle behind
the operation of a
lens is refraction
: the
bending of light as it
passes from air into
glass (or plastic)
4
Refraction (bending) depends upon the
index of refraction, n
 
Incident
ray
 
Refracted
ray
 
Material of Index of refraction, n
 
Normal line
 The refracted ray
is bent 
away
 from
the direction of the
incident ray, toward
the normal line.
 The larger the
value of n, the more
the ray is bent.
5
 
There is a rule (Snell’s Law) for calculating the angle
of refraction given the angle of incidence.
A flat  (sides are parallel) piece
of glass does not make a lens
Refraction occurs at
surfaces 1 and 2
At surface 1, the ray is bent
toward the normal
At surface 2, the rays are
bent away from the normal
The rays emerging from
surface 2 are parallel to the
incident rays but displaced
The rays are neither
converging or diverging, so
this does not form a lens
6
converging lens: thicker in middle
focal
point F
 
 A converging lens focuses parallel rays
  to a point called the focal point.
 A thicker lens has a shorter focal length.
7
Diverging lens: thicker at edge
F
A diverging lens causes
parallel rays to diverge
as if they came from a
focal point F
8
Refraction at a curved surface
9
 
Refraction at a curved surface
 
10
 
The 
red lines 
represent an approximation to the actual 
lens
. Each 
ray
 hits the
surface at a different angle of incidence because the 
normal
 
lines 
are all different.
Thus each ray is bent differently but all converge to a single focal point F.
Image formation by a
 converging lens
object
image
F
2F
If the object is located at a distance of at least 2F from the
lens, the image is inverted and smaller than the object.
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actually converge at the image location
11
A converging lens is used to
focus rays from the sun to a point
 
since the sun is very
far from the lens, the
rays are nearly
parallel
12
 a converging lens is used in a camera
to focus light onto the film
 
when you focus a camera, you adjust the
distance between the lens and the film
depending on the object location.
13
Image formation by a diverging lens
Object
image
The diverging lens produces an image that is upright
and diminished in size.
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actually pass through the image point
14
a magnifying lens
 
F
 
object
 
virtual image
 
By placing the lens close to the object (image is within
the focal length) a magnified virtual image is formed.
15
Vision – 
the human eye
 
Physics of the human eye
Abnormal vision
Nearsightedness
Farsightedness
astigmatism
Depth perception
 
16
light enters through the
cornea
the iris controls the
amount of light that gets
in, a muscle can close it
or open it; the iris
determines your eye
color
the lens is filled with a
jelly-like substance; the
ciliary muscle can
change the shape of the
lens and thus change its
focal length
The Eye
 
by changing the focal 
length,  
(accommodation)
 the
lens is able to focus light onto
the retina for objects located
at various  distances 
17
the physics of the human eye
 The relaxed eye can easily focus on distant objects.
 To focus on close objects, the lens is squeezed to shorten
   it’s focal length, allowing the rays to converge on the retina.
 The 
near point
 is the distance at which the closest
   object can be seen clearly. The near point recedes with age.
Normal vision
18
When a 
nearsighted
 
person views a distant object, the lens
cannot relax enough to focus at the retina. The rays converge
too quickly. The remedy is to place a diverging lens in front
of the eye to first diverge the rays before they enter the eye.
Corrective lens for a nearsighted person
19
When a 
farsighted
 person tries to focus on a close object
the lens cannot be squeezed enough to focus on the retina.
The focus point is behind the retina. The remedy is to place
a converging lens in front of the eye to converge the rays
before they enter the eye. 
Corrective lens for a farsighted person
20
How does the eye judge distance?
 
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Our eyes roll inward slightly to focus on the
distant point D. Our brain interprets the distance
BD by the muscular effort required to roll the
eyes inward.
21
Astigmatism
 With 
astigmatism
 the
cornea is oval like a
football instead of spherical
like a basketball.
This causes light to focus
on more than one point in
the eye, resulting in blurred
vision.
It can be corrected with
specially shaped lenses or,
in extreme cases, with
surgery
22
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Understanding images formed by mirrors, lenses, and the human eye in the context of light and optics. Covering concepts like reflection, refraction, concave and convex mirrors, types of lenses, correcting vision issues, and laws governing the behavior of light.

  • Light
  • Optics
  • Vision
  • Reflection
  • Refraction

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  1. L 31 Light and Optics-3 Images formed by mirrors plane mirrors curved mirrors Concave (converging) Convex (diverging) Images formed by lenses the human eye correcting vision problems nearsightedness farsightedness astigmatism depth perception PLANE CONCAVE F CONVEX F 1

  2. Review-Law of reflection angle of incidence = angle of reflection R PLANE angle of reflection normal line angle of incidence 90 I Each segment of a curved mirror is a plane mirror. R I I R CONVEX 2 CONCAVE

  3. Review VIRTUALimage: light rays appear to come from a point where there is no light REALimage: light rays actually converge at the image location PLANE MIRROR Image is VIRTUAL Same size as object Upright Same distance behind mirror OBJECT IMAGE CONCAVE MIRROR Image is REAL Inverted smaller than object OBJECT IMAGE 3

  4. Image formation with lenses lenses are relatively simple optical devices the principle behind the operation of a lens is refraction: the bending of light as it passes from air into glass (or plastic) converging lens (positive lens) diverging lens (negative lens) the human eye correcting for nearsightedness correcting for farsightedness optical instruments 4

  5. Refraction (bending) depends upon the index of refraction, n The refracted ray is bent away from the direction of the incident ray, toward the normal line. The larger the value of n, the more the ray is bent. Refracted ray Normal line Material of Index of refraction, n Incident ray There is a rule (Snell s Law) for calculating the angle of refraction given the angle of incidence. 5

  6. A flat (sides are parallel) piece of glass does not make a lens Refraction occurs at surfaces 1 and 2 At surface 1, the ray is bent toward the normal At surface 2, the rays are bent away from the normal The rays emerging from surface 2 are parallel to the incident rays but displaced The rays are neither converging or diverging, so this does not form a lens 1 2 6

  7. converging lens: thicker in middle focal point F A converging lens focuses parallel rays to a point called the focal point. A thicker lens has a shorter focal length. 7

  8. Diverging lens: thicker at edge F A diverging lens causes parallel rays to diverge as if they came from a focal point F 8

  9. Refraction at a curved surface Converging lens Diverging lens 9

  10. Refraction at a curved surface F The red lines represent an approximation to the actual lens. Each ray hits the surface at a different angle of incidence because the normal lines are all different. Thus each ray is bent differently but all converge to a single focal point F. 10

  11. Image formation by a converging lens image 2F F object If the object is located at a distance of at least 2F from the lens, the image is inverted and smaller than the object. The image is called a REAL image since light rays actually converge at the image location 11

  12. A converging lens is used to focus rays from the sun to a point since the sun is very far from the lens, the rays are nearly parallel 12

  13. a converging lens is used in a camera to focus light onto the film when you focus a camera, you adjust the distance between the lens and the film depending on the object location. 13

  14. Image formation by a diverging lens image Object The diverging lens produces an image that is upright and diminished in size. It is a VIRTUAL image, since light rays do not actually pass through the image point 14

  15. a magnifying lens F F object virtual image By placing the lens close to the object (image is within the focal length) a magnified virtual image is formed. 15

  16. Vision the human eye Physics of the human eye Abnormal vision Nearsightedness Farsightedness astigmatism Depth perception 16

  17. The Eye light enters through the cornea the iris controls the amount of light that gets in, a muscle can close it or open it; the iris determines your eye color the lens is filled with a jelly-like substance; the ciliary muscle can change the shape of the lens and thus change its focal length by changing the focal length, (accommodation) the lens is able to focus light onto the retina for objects located at various distances 17

  18. the physics of the human eye Normal vision The relaxed eye can easily focus on distant objects. To focus on close objects, the lens is squeezed to shorten it s focal length, allowing the rays to converge on the retina. The near point is the distance at which the closest object can be seen clearly. The near point recedes with age. 18

  19. Corrective lens for a nearsighted person When a nearsighted person views a distant object, the lens cannot relax enough to focus at the retina. The rays converge too quickly. The remedy is to place a diverging lens in front of the eye to first diverge the rays before they enter the eye. 19

  20. Corrective lens for a farsighted person When a farsighted person tries to focus on a close object the lens cannot be squeezed enough to focus on the retina. The focus point is behind the retina. The remedy is to place a converging lens in front of the eye to converge the rays before they enter the eye. 20

  21. How does the eye judge distance? Right eye D B Left eye Our brain interprets the images formed on the retinas of both eyes as a single image this is called binocular vision Our eyes roll inward slightly to focus on the distant point D. Our brain interprets the distance BD by the muscular effort required to roll the eyes inward. 21

  22. Astigmatism With astigmatism the cornea is oval like a football instead of spherical like a basketball. This causes light to focus on more than one point in the eye, resulting in blurred vision. It can be corrected with specially shaped lenses or, in extreme cases, with surgery 22

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