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Lecturer: Ivan Kassamakov, Docent Assistants: Risto Montonen and Anton Nolvi Doctoral Assistants: Risto Montonen and Anton Nolvi, Doctoral students Course webpage: Course webpage: http://electronics.physics.helsinki.fi/teaching/optics-2016-2/

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Page 1: Assistants: RistoMontonenand Antonand Anton Nolvi ...electronics.physics.helsinki.fi/wp-content/uploads/... · In Optica Euclid established the principles of perspective: believed

Lecturer: Ivan Kassamakov, Docent Assistants: Risto Montonen and Anton Nolvi DoctoralAssistants: Risto Montonen and Anton Nolvi, Doctoral students

Course webpage:Course webpage:http://electronics.physics.helsinki.fi/teaching/optics-2016-2/

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Personal information

Ivan Kassamakov e-mail: [email protected] office: PHYSICUM - PHY C 318 (9:00-19:00)

Risto Montonen e-mail: [email protected] office: PHYSICUM - PHY A 312

Anton Nolvi e-mail: [email protected] office: PHYSICUM - PHY C 317

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Schedule:

Lectures: Tuesdays: 10:15 – 12:00, 19.01.2016 – 03.05.2016, Lecture Room: PHYSICUM - PHY D116 SH;

Exercises: Tuesdays: 12:15 – 14:00, 19.01.2012 – 03.05.2016, L t R PHYSICUM PHY D116 SHLecture Room: PHYSICUM - PHY D116 SH;

Demonstrations: Demonstrations: Electronics Laboratory: PHYSICUM - PHY C 312 - 316 .

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Lectures

Lecture # Week # Place - Lecture Room Date Starting time Ending time

01 OPTIIKKA : LUENTO 3 PHYSICUM - PHY D116 SH 19.1.2016 10:15 12:00

02 OPTIIKKA : LUENTO 4 PHYSICUM - PHY D116 SH 26.1.2016 10:15 12:0002 OPTIIKKA : LUENTO 4 PHYSICUM PHY D116 SH 26.1.2016 10:15 12:00

03 OPTIIKKA : LUENTO 5 PHYSICUM - PHY D116 SH 02.2.2016 10:15 12:00

04 OPTIIKKA : LUENTO 6 PHYSICUM - PHY D116 SH 09.2.2016 10:15 12:00

05 OPTIIKKA : LUENTO 7 PHYSICUM - PHY D116 SH 16.2.2016 10:15 12:00

06 OPTIIKKA : LUENTO 8 PHYSICUM - PHY D116 SH 23.2.2016 10:15 12:00

07 OPTIIKKA : LUENTO 9 PHYSICUM - PHY D116 SH 01.3.2016 10:15 12:00

08 OPTIIKKA : LUENTO 11 PHYSICUM - PHY D116 SH 15.3.2016 10:15 12:00

09 OPTIIKKA : LUENTO 12 PHYSICUM - PHY D116 SH 22.3.2016 10:15 12:00

10 OPTIIKKA : LUENTO 14 PHYSICUM - PHY D116 SH 05.4.2016 10:15 12:00

11 OPTIIKKA : LUENTO 15 PHYSICUM - PHY D116 SH 12.4.2016 10:15 12:00

12 OPTIIKKA : LUENTO 16 PHYSICUM - PHY D116 SH 19.4.2016 10:15 12:00

13 OPTIIKKA : LUENTO 17 PHYSICUM - PHY D116 SH 26.4.2016 10:15 12:00

14 OPTIIKKA : LUENTO 18 PHYSICUM - PHY D116 SH 03.5.2016 10:15 12:00

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Exercises

Exercises # Week # Place - Lecture Room Date Starting time Ending time

01 OPTIIKKA : LUENTO 3 PHYSICUM - PHY D116 SH 19.1.2016 14:15 16:00

02 OPTIIKKA : LUENTO 4 PHYSICUM - PHY D116 SH 26.1.2016 14:15 16:0002 OPTIIKKA : LUENTO 4 PHYSICUM PHY D116 SH 26.1.2016 14:15 16:00

03 OPTIIKKA : LUENTO 5 PHYSICUM - PHY D116 SH 02.2.2016 14:15 16:00

04 OPTIIKKA : LUENTO 6 PHYSICUM - PHY D116 SH 09.2.2016 14:15 16:00

05 OPTIIKKA : LUENTO 7 PHYSICUM - PHY D116 SH 16.2.2016 14:15 16:00

06 OPTIIKKA : LUENTO 8 PHYSICUM - PHY D116 SH 23.2.2016 14:15 16:00

07 OPTIIKKA : LUENTO 9 PHYSICUM - PHY D116 SH 01.3.2016 14:15 16:00

08 OPTIIKKA : LUENTO 11 PHYSICUM - PHY D116 SH 15.3.2016 14:15 16:00

09 OPTIIKKA : LUENTO 12 PHYSICUM - PHY D116 SH 22.3.2016 14:15 16:00

10 OPTIIKKA : LUENTO 14 PHYSICUM - PHY D116 SH 05.4.2016 14:15 16:00

11 OPTIIKKA : LUENTO 15 PHYSICUM - PHY D116 SH 12.4.2016 14:15 16:00

12 OPTIIKKA : LUENTO 16 PHYSICUM - PHY D116 SH 19.4.2016 14:15 16:00

13 OPTIIKKA : LUENTO 17 PHYSICUM - PHY D116 SH 26.4.2016 14:15 16:00

14 OPTIIKKA : LUENTO 18 PHYSICUM - PHY D116 SH 03.5.2016 14:15 16:00

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Textbook

Th t t f thi i “O ti ” The text for this course is “Optics”, 4th edition by Eugene Hecht,Addi W l 2003Addison Wesley, 2003, ISBN 0-321-1 8878-0.

The breakdown of the general topics to be covered is:covered is:

1. Brief History (Chapter 1).2. The propagation of light (Chapter 4).3. Geometric optics – paraxial theory (Chapter 5).4. Polarization (Chapter 8).5. Interference (Chapter 9)( p )6. Diffraction (Chapter 10)

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Additional Texts (1)Additional Texts (1)

Physics for Scientists and Engineers with Modern Physics, by John Jewett; Raymond Serway, Publisher: Brooks/Cole; International Student Ed edition, ISBN-13: 978-0495112402

Chaptes 34 - 38

Thanks to Dorota Murawska, Cengage Learning Representative for Finland for the electronics version of the book andfor the electronics version of the book and Active Figures.

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Additional Texts (2)( ) Geometrical and Trigonometric Optics by Eustace L.

Dereniak and Teresa D. Dereniak, Publisher: Cambridge University Press, September 2008 ISBN:9780521887465

Schaum's Outline of Optics by Eugene Hecht P bli h M G Hill 1 diti (N b 1 1974) Publisher: McGraw-Hill; 1 edition (November 1, 1974) ISBN: 0070277303

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Ray-tracing software

Prof. WolfgangOsten

MacroSim is open source, GPU accelerated ray tracing engine. Originally developed for fast non-sequential stray light analysis of a spectrometer system it offers thelight analysis of a spectrometer system, it offers the possibility to trace geometric rays sequentially and non sequentially with 64 bit floating point precision.

http://www.ito.uni-stuttgart.de/software/macrosim/

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Optics (theory of perspective) p ( y p p )

Optics from Greek optós: " seen visible" or Optics - from Greek optós: seen, visible or optikē: the science of visual perception. In Antiquity optics was chiefly a study of sight: today it In Antiquity optics was chiefly a study of sight: today it

is primarily concerned with the physics of light. In Euclid's time optics was mainly subjective: today it

ranks among the most objective and quantitative of the physical sciences .

OPTICS Th b h f h i th t d l ith OPTICS: The branch of physics that deals with light and vision, primarily the generation, propagation and detection of electromagneticpropagation, and detection of electromagnetic radiation having wavelengths greater than x-rays and shorter than microwaves.and shorter than microwaves.

http://www.thefreedictionary.com/optics

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Visible light waves are the only electromagnetic waves we can see. We see these waves as the colors of the rainbow Each color has a differentWe see these waves as the colors of the rainbow. Each color has a different wavelength. Red has the longest wavelength and violet has the shortest wavelength. When all the waves are seen together they make white lightWhen all the waves are seen together, they make white light.

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Visible lightVisible lightWavelengths and frequencies of visible light

The transition wavelengths are a bit arbitrary. Visible light used to be 400 to 700 nm, but now it’s officially 380 to 780 nm.

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Why study optics?1.We’ll talk about things you see every day but

generally don’t question.g y q• Why do windows act like mirrors at night (when you’re

inside)?Does light really always travel in a straight line?• Does light really always travel in a straight line?

• What’s the difference between a laser and a light bulb?• What makes the colors and what’s going on in a rainbow?What makes the colors and what s going on in a rainbow?• Why is the sky blue and the sunset red?• What causes the spectacular colors in soap bubbles and oil

slicks?2.We’ll talk about Cool things that happen to light:

T t l I t l R fl ti• Total Internal Reflection;• Interference;• Diffraction;Diffraction;• The Laser.

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Why study optics? Lasers and fiber y y poptics will soon replace most wires.

Prof. Rick Trebino; Georgia Tech; www.physics.gatech.edu/frog/lectures

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Brief history of Opticsy pToday’s optics embraces a vast knowledge accumulated over more than 3000 years of human civilization.

In the Beginning ANCIENT HISTORY: Aristophanes, Democritus, Aristotle, Archimedes,

Seneca, Nero, Ptolemy, Alhazan.Seneca, Nero, Ptolemy, Alhazan. SPECTACLES: Bacon, Keppler, Franklin, Airy.

From the Seventeenth Century THE TELESCOPE: Lippershey, Galileo, Newton, Gregory, Cassegrain, pp y g y g

Schmidt. THE MICROSCOPE: Jansen, Hooke, Huygens, van Leeuwenhoek,

Lister, Gauss, Abbe. The Nineteenth CenturyThe Nineteenth Century

RAY OPTICS , CORPUSCLES AND WAVELETS: Snell, Descartes, Fermat, Hamilton, Bradley, Euler.

WAVE OPTICS: Young, Fresnel, Laplace, Fourier, Poisson, Malus, Brewster Foucault Fizeau DopplerBrewster, Foucault, Fizeau, Doppler.

OPTICS, ELECTROMAGNETIC WAVES AND QUANTA: Maxwell, Hertz, Luneburg, Fraunhofer, Planck, Einstein, Bohr.

Twentieth-Century Optics

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Burning glass

The history of optics and optical devices begins in ancient Greece ~5-3 century BC;

The Greek philosophers developed several theories ofThe Greek philosophers developed several theories of the nature of light.

Aristophanes (Ἀριστοφάνης, ca. 446 – ca. 386 BC), was a comic playwright of ancient Athensa comic playwright of ancient Athens.

Aristophanes mentions the burning-glass in his play The Clouds (Νεφέλαι / Nephelai - 424 BC). In Clouds a

“ f ” ’character “reflects” the sun’s rays to secretly melt a text written on a wax tablet.

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Burning glassBurning glassThe text;

Strepsiades: Have you ever seen this stone in the chemist's shops, the beautiful and transparent one, from which they kindle fire?Socrates: Do you mean the burning-glass?y g gStrepsiades. I do. Come what would you say, pray, if I were to take this, when the clerk was entering the suit, and were to stand at a distance in the direction of the sun thus and meltstand at a distance, in the direction of the sun, thus, and melt out the letters of my suit?

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Ancient light weaponsg p

• Archimedes the renowned• Archimedes, the renowned mathematician, was said to have used a burningmirrors (or more likely a ( ylarge number of angled hexagonal mirrors) as a weapon in 212 BC, when S b i d bSyracuse was besieged by Marcus Claudius Marcellus. The Roman fleet was

Wall painting from the Stanzino delle Matematiche in the Galleria degli Uffizi (Florence, Italy). Painted by Giulio Parigi (1571-1635) in the years 1599-1600.

• The Roman fleet was supposedly incinerated, though eventually the city was taken and Archimedeswas taken and Archimedes was slain.

http://www.cs.drexel.edu/~crorres/Archimedes/contents.html

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Burning mirrors (1)g ( )

In 1973 Dr Ioannis Sakkas Greek engineer conducted a series of In 1973 Dr. Ioannis Sakkas, Greek engineer, conducted a series of experiments to prove that Archimedes, defeated the Romans with solar energy.

Focused 50 mirrors painted bronze on a small boat rowing and reflected pon it the s n's ra s ’upon it the sun's rays.’

Within seconds the boat began to smoke, and after two minutes burst into flames.

Greek Professor Evenghelos Stamatis, leading authority on Archimedes g , g ylooked after the experiment and stated that there was no scientific doubt that Syracuse had used solar power.

http://www.editorialbitacora.com/armagedon/arquimedes/arquimedes.htm

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Burning mirrors (2)g ( )

And despite a failed attempt by the Discovery Channel’s Myth Busters to replicate the feat, in 2005 MIT undergrads set up 127 mirrors in a courtyard to test the idea…

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Euclid’s Catoptrics and Opticap p

Euclid [yoo-klid] (300 B.C.), was a Greek mathematician from Alexandria [al ig zan dree ia] Egyptfrom Alexandria [al-ig-zan-dree-ia] - Egypt

Euclid’s Optics and Catoptrics are the oldest surviving works dedicated entirely to optics.

In Catoptrics (from the Greek κατοπτρικός – specular(mirrors) Euclid enunciated The law of reflection: Rays are reflected at equal angles by plane, convex, and concaveRays are reflected at equal angles by plane, convex, and concave

mirrors Modern version: The reflected ray lies in the plane of incidence; the

angle of reflection equals the angle of incidence.O f In Optica Euclid established the principles of perspective:

believed that vision involves rays going from the eyes to the object seen. observed that "Magnitudes seen within a larger angle appear larger,

h th ithi ll l ll d thwhereas those seen within a smaller angle appear smaller, and those seen within equal angles appear to be equal“.

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Ptolemy - Refractiony

Ptolemy (Claudius Ptolemaeus - Κλαύδιος Πτολεμαίος 90 – 168), discussed refraction in his Optics [130 A D ]discussed refraction in his Optics [130 A.D.].

From a physical point of view, the work of Ptolemy is immensely important because he makes extensive use ofimmensely important because he makes extensive use of carefully contrived experiments to support his arguments;

Ptolemy’s measurements of the angle of refraction are surprisingly exact He found in Book V of the Optics the anglesurprisingly exact. He found, in Book V of the Optics, the angle that rays make when moving “from rarer and more tenuous to denser media” (i.e. from air to water to glass) and the other way around and he was able to describe this behaviorway around, and he was able to describe this behavior qualitatively, however he did not succeed in formulating the mathematical law of refraction;

Ptolemy’s Optics contains many fine results and we can Ptolemy s Optics contains many fine results and we can certainly think of it as the culmination of ancient mathematical optics.

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Ibn al Haitham (Alhazen)Ibn-al-Haitham (Alhazen) Arab scientist Alhazen ( 1000 AD) studied sphericalArab scientist Alhazen (~1000 AD) studied sphericaland parabolic mirrors.

Alhazen correctly proposed that the eyes passively receive lightreflected from objects ratherreflected from objects, rather than emanating light raysthemselves.themselves.

He also explained the lawsof reflection and refractionof reflection and refractionby the slower movement of light through denser substances.light through denser substances.

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Lenses 721 - 705 B.C.LAYARD LENS

LAYARD LENS - In 1853 Sir Austen Layard returned from his excavations at Nimrud, one of the capitals of the ancient kingdom of Assyria in northern Iraq. One treasure he brought back with him was a small oval piece of polished rocky crystal, about on-

LAYARD LENS

brought back with him was a small oval piece of polished rocky crystal, about onquarter inch thick, in the shape of the lens with one flat surface and one convex, which he had found among a collection of glassware of the ninth to seventh centuries B.C. Layard consulted Sir Davis Brewster, a famous physicist and specialist in optics, who pronounced the object could have been used "either for a magnifying or for

t ti th f th " L d t d "It ti ld lconcentrating the rays of the sun." Layard noted, "Its properties would scarcely have been unknown to the Assyrians and consequently we have the earliest known specimen of the burning and magnifying glass."

Around 50 A.D., the Roman philosopher Seneca noticed that objects appeared biggerif watched through a glass globe of water: however he thought that the phenomenonif watched through a glass globe of water: however, he thought that the phenomenon was due to water rather than the glass curvature. Seneca; Quaestianes Naturales, I, vi 5.

The very important discovery was a Roman period magnifying lens discovered in 1854 in the "House of the Engraver" on the Stabian Way in Pompeii It is plano1854 in the House of the Engraver on the Stabian Way in Pompeii. It is plano-convex with a corroded, opaque surface and is in the gem collection at the National Museum in Naples. The fact that such a lens was discovered in the shop of an ancient engraver indicate this use for magnification. (Sines and Sakellearakis, Lens in Antiquity, American Journal of Archaeology 91 (1987)).q y, gy ( ))

http://www.robert-temple.com/articles/crystalSunFreemansonryToday.html

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ROGER BACON (1214 - 1294)ROGER BACON (1214 1294)Roger Bacon - also known as Doctor Mirabilis (Latin: "wonderful teacher") was an English(Latin: wonderful teacher ), was an English philosopher and Franciscan friar who placed considerable emphasis on empiricism.

He wrote definite descriptions of simple magnification in his Perspectiva of 1267 "Great things can be performed by refracted vision. If the letters of a g p ybook, or any minute object, be viewed through a lesser segment of a sphere of glass or crystal, whose plane is laid upon them, they will appear far better and larger."

This proponent of medieval science writes in his treatise 'De Multiplicatione This proponent of medieval science writes in his treatise De MultiplicationeSpecierum' (Book II, ch.viii) and 'Perspectiva', the principle of the camera obscura. He talks of observing the view outside a darkroom, and eclipses by way of a ray of light passing through an aperture and projecting itself. Bacon speaks of the camera obscura effect but does not describe the apparatusspeaks of the camera obscura effect but does not describe the apparatus.

His most important mathematical contribution is the application of geometry to optics.

Bacon followed Grosseteste in emphasizing the use of lens for p gmagnification to aid natural vision.

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Eyeglassesy g Magnifying glasses became

common in the thirteenthcentury but these arecentury, but these are cumbersome, especially when one is writing.

Craftsmen in Venice began Craftsmen in Venice began making small disks of glass, convex on both sides, that could be worn in a frame spectaclesbe worn in a frame--spectacles.

The little disks were shaped like lentils, they became known as "lentils of glass " or (from the •The Spectacle Vendor by

J h St d dlentils of glass, or (from the Latin) lenses.

The earliest illustrations of spectacles date from about

Johannes Stradanus,engraved by Johannes Collaert, 1582

spectacles date from about 1350, and spectacles soon came to be symbols of learning.

Detail of portrait of Hugh de Provence, Tomasso da Modena, 1352

http://galileo.rice.edu/sci/instruments/telescope.html

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Camera ObscuraCamera Obscura• The camera obscura (room darkened) dates to ancient times; it was

first detailed in the writings of Leonardo da Vinci.g• A room is completely sealed from light except for a coin-sized hole in

one wall. An image of the outside world appears projected, upside down and reversed right-to-left, onto a wall opposite the opening.

Diffuse light

Camera = Latin for “room”Obscura = Latin for “dark”

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The Renaissance

Leonardo da Vinci (1452 1528) d ib d Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1528) described the "camera obscura“ in Codex Atlanticus(Atlantic Codex) . “Here the figures, here the colours here all the images of every part of thecolours, here all the images of every part of the universe are contracted to a point. O what a point is so marvelous!”

Della Porta (1535 - 1615) camera obscura with a ( )convex lens at the aperture - likened this to the eye (Magia Naturalis - Natural Magic published in Naples in 1558 ).

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Johannes Vermeer (1632-1675)( )Common elements in his paintings and ray tracing analysis suggest that this great Dutch artist may have y gg g ybuilt a camera obscura in his studio.

The Music Lesson

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Vermeer

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Giant CameraGiant CameraCamera obscura with a projecting mirrorCamera obscura with a projecting mirror.Ocean Beach - Seal Rock Area SF CA

Mirror

Mirror

Next to the Cliff House San FranciscoNext to the Cliff House, San Francisco

artphysics123.pbworks.com/f/L21_RefractScatter.ppt

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Giant CameraGiant Camera

Camera obscura - Ocean Beach - Seal Rock Area SF CA

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J h K l (1571 1630)Johannes Kepler (1571 – 1630)

In his book Dioptrice he was the: First to describe: real, virtual, upright and

inverted images and magnification; First to explain the principles of how a

telescope works; First to discover and describe the

ti f t t l i t l fl tiproperties of total internal reflection In 1620 Kepler sketched in a small black

tent, through the top of which projected a rotatable tube containing a biconvex lensrotatable tube containing a biconvex lens, and a mirror to reflex the image down on to the drawing-board.

Remnant of Kepler's Supernova SN 1604 (NASA) He began observing it on October 17 1604.

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Hans Lippershey (1587-1619)pp y ( )

Also known as Johann Lippershey or Lipperhey, was a German-Dutch lensmaker, generally credited as being the inventor of the t ltelescope;

In October 1608 applied for a patent - “seeing faraway things as though nearby” with the Belgian government for his "looker" in 1608;Belgian government for his looker in 1608;

A patent was not granted because it was felt that the simple device could not be kept a secret;

Lippershey made several binocular telescopes Lippershey made several binocular telescopesfor the States General and was paid handsomely for his services.

Mi t f Li h ' t t li tiMinute of Lipperhey's patent application

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Galileo Galilei (1564 1642)Galileo Galilei (1564-1642) Galileo's first telescope onlyGalileo s first telescope only

improved the view to eighth power.

Within a few years, he began i di hi l dgrinding his own lenses and

changing his arrays. Galileo's telescope was now capable of magnifying aboutcapable of magnifying about 10 times more than normal vision.

October/November 1609 Galileo observed the moon.

On January 7, 1610, he turned his new 30 power telescope t d J it d f d

32X powertowards Jupiter, and found three small, bright stars near the planet. He discovered the fourth on 13 Januaryfourth on 13 January. “Father of modern science”

Albert Einstein

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Major Discoveries of Galileoj• Moons of Jupiter (4 Galilean moons)

• Rings of Saturng

(What he really saw)

http://faculty.physics.tamu.edu/belyanin/

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Major Discoveries of Galileo (2)j ( )• Surface structures on the moon; first estimates

of the height of mountains on the moonof the height of mountains on the moon

http://faculty.physics.tamu.edu/belyanin/

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Major Discoveries of Galileo (3)j ( )

• Sun spots (proving that the sun is not perfect!)http://faculty.physics.tamu.edu/belyanin/

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Major Discoveries of Galileo (4)j ( )• Phases of Venus (including “full Venus”),

i th t V bit th t th E th!proving that Venus orbits the sun, not the Earth!

http://faculty.physics.tamu.edu/belyanin/

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Willibrord SnellWillibrord SnellWillibrord Snell discovered theWillibrord Snell discovered the relationship between theangle of incidence and angle of refraction when light passes from onee act o e g t passes o o etransparent medium to another - Law of Refraction, now named after him.

Willibrord Snell n11

(1591-1626)

n22

1 1 2 2sin( ) sin( )n n ni is the refractive index of each imedium.

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Rene Descartes (1596-1650)Robert Hooke (1635-1703)

The first to publish the now familiar formulation of the Law of R f ti i t f iRefraction in terms of sines.

Descartes reasoned that light must be like sound. So he modeled light as pressure variations in a medium (aether).

Robert Hooke (1635-1703) studied colored interference between thin films and developed the first wave th f li httheory of light.

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Anton van Leeuwenhoek (1632-1723)

A glass-sphere brass microscope preserved at Delftpreserved at Delft.

This is the only Leeuwenhoek microscope still found in his home town. It i th i f t l t It is the size of a rectangular postage stamp.

The lens is missing, but the focussingcontrols and the body plates are typical of those made by Leeuwenhoek.

A) a screw for adjusting the height of) j g gthe object being examinedB) a metal plate serving as the bodyC) a skewer to impale the object and rotate itC) a skewer to impale the object and rotate itD) the lens itself, which was spherical

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Sir Isaac Newton (1642-1727)( )

Dispersion of light Dispersion of light through prisms - white light is a mixture of gcolours.

Published Opticks(1704) light was(1704) light was "corpuscular" and had finite velocity. y

Newton's Rings Invented the reflecting

telescope.

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Christiaan Huygens (1629-1695)Christiaan Huygens (1629-1695) Huygens extended the wave theory of

optics. He realized that light slowed down on

entering dense mediaentering dense media. He explained polarization and

double refraction.

Huygens‘ principlesays that a wave propagates as if

the wave-front werecomposed of an ar-pray of point sources

each emitting aspherical wavespherical wave.

Double refraction

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Euler, Young, and Fresnel, g,

Leonhard Euler (1707-1783) further developed the wave theory and designed achromatic lenses by combining lenses of different materialsmaterials.

Thomas Young (1773-1829) explained i t f d l d f i dinterference and colored fringes and showed that light was a transverse wave.

Augustin Fresnel (1788-1827) g ( )considered light as waves and showed that interference effects could be explained by wave theory

Augustin Fresnelexplained by wave theory.

Wave theory enjoyed success up to the 20th century.

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James Clerk Maxwell (1831-1879)James Clerk Maxwell (1831 1879)

Maxwell unified electricity andMaxwell unified electricity and magnetism with his now famous equations and showed that light is q gan electromagnetic wave.

0 BE Et

2

10 EB Bc t

where is the electric field is the magnetic fieldE

B

where is the electric field, is the magnetic field, and c is the velocity of light.

E B

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Albert Einstein (1879-1955)( ) Special relativity (1905): speed

of light is a universal constantof light is a universal constantwhich is independent of the state of motion of the emitting body.

Proposed particle theory of Proposed particle theory of light to explain the photoelectric effect (1905). Much later he said "I spent m life to find o t hat a"I spent my life to find out what a photon is and I still don't know it."

In 1916 proposed that the stimulated emission of light is a process that should occur in paddition to absorption and spontaneous emission - that formed the theoretical foundationformed the theoretical foundation for the laser.

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Maiman’s Ruby LASERy

Maiman's laser based on a synthetic ruby crystalMaiman s laser, based on a synthetic ruby crystal (Al2O3 monocrystal, Cr doped), was first operated on 16 May 1960 at Hughes Research Laboratories in Malibu CaliforniaMalibu, California.

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Louis de Broglie 1892 – 1987Louis de Broglie 1892  1987

In 1924, Louis de Broglie postulated that because photons have wave andphotons have wave and particle characteristics, perhaps all forms of matter have both propertieshave both properties

Furthermore, the frequency and wavelength of matter gwaves can be determined

“Light is, in short, the most g , ,refined form of matter.”

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N b l L tNobel Laureates From 1901 to 2015, a total of 900 Nobel

Laureates have been awarded the Nobel Prize, comprising 874 Nobel Laureates and 26 organizations. Physics – 201 (John Bardeen 2 times – 200 laureates) Chemistry -172 (Frederick Sanger 2 times – 171

laureates) Physiology or Medicine - 210

http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/facts/ The Nobel Prize Medal forPhysics and Chemistry

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Nobel Laureates in the field of Optics

Physics – 62 (200) (29 OSA)Ch i t 13 (171) (4 OSA)Chemistry – 13 (171) (4 OSA)Physiology or Medicine – 5 (210) (2Physiology or Medicine 5 (210) (2 OSA)

http://www.osa.org/en-us/about_osa/osa_nobel_laureates/#faq3

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The Nobel Prize in Physics 2009The Nobel Prize in Physics 2009"for the invention of an imaging semiconductor circuit the CCD sensor"

"for groundbreaking achievements concerning the transmission of semiconductor circuit – the CCD sensor glight in fibers for optical communication"

Charles K. Kao1/2 of the prize

Willard S. Boyle 1/4 of the prize B ll L b t i

George E. Smith1/4 of the prize

Standard Telecommunication Laboratories Harlow, United Kingdom; Chi U i i f H

Bell Laboratories Murray Hill, NJ, USAb. 1924(in Amherst, NS, Canada)

Bell Laboratories Murray Hill, NJ, USAb. 1930

Chinese University of Hong Kong,Hong Kong, b. 1924 (in Shanghai, China) http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/physics/laureates/2009/