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Dr. Jie Zou PHY 1371 1 Chapter 36 Image Formation

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Dr. Jie Zou PHY 1371 1

Chapter 36

Image Formation

Dr. Jie Zou PHY 1371 2

Outline Forming images with a plane mirror Spherical mirrors

Concave mirror and convex mirror Forming images with a concave or

convex mirror Ray tracing (ray diagram) Mirror equation Sign conventions

Dr. Jie Zou PHY 1371 3

Forming Images with a Plane Mirror

Forming a mirror image: The light from an object reflects from

a mirror before it enters our eyes. To the observer, it appears that the

rays are emanating from behind the mirror.

Some properties of a plane mirror image:

It is upright. It is the same distance behind the

mirror as the object is in front of the mirror.

It is the same size as the object. It is a virtual but NOT a real image.

Dr. Jie Zou PHY 1371 4

Conceptual Checkpoint To save expenses,

you would like to buy the shortest mirror that will allow you to see your entire body. Should the mirror be (a) half your height, (b) two-thirds your

height, or (c) equal to your

height?

Dr. Jie Zou PHY 1371 5

Spherical Mirrors A spherical mirror has the same

shape as a section of a sphere. Concave mirror: The inside surface

is reflecting. Convex mirror: The outside surface

is a reflecting. Center of curvature C: the

center of the sphere with radius R of which the mirror is a section.

Principal axis: a straight line drawn through the center of curvature and the midpoint of the mirror.

Focal point and focal length (see next slide)

Dr. Jie Zou PHY 1371 6

Focal Point and Focal Length of Convex and Concave Mirrors

Focal point F Focal length f:

For a convex mirror: f = - (1/2)R. “-” sign indicates that the focal point F lies behind the mirror.

For a concave mirror: f = (1/2)R. “+” sign indicates that the focal point is in front of the mirror. In this case, the rays of light actually pass through and converge at the focal point F.

Convex mirror

Concave mirror

Dr. Jie Zou PHY 1371 7

Forming Images with a Convex and Concave Mirror

Two techniques to find the orientation, size, and location of an image formed by a spherical mirror: (1) Ray tracing (ray diagram): Gives

the orientation of the image as well as qualitative information on its location and size.

(2) Mirror equation: Provides precise and quantitative information without the need for accurate scale drawing.

Dr. Jie Zou PHY 1371 8

Raying Tracing Basic idea behind ray tracing:

Follow the path of representative rays of light as they reflect from a mirror and form an image.

Three representative rays: (1) Parallel ray (P ray): a ray parallel

to the principle axis of the mirror (2) Focal-point ray (F ray): a ray

that passes through (concave mirror) or moves toward (convex mirror) the focal point F

(3) Center-of-curvature ray (C ray): a ray that moves along a straight line extending from the center of curvature C

Concave mirror

Convex mirror

Dr. Jie Zou PHY 1371 9

Ray Diagram for a Convex Mirror

Image properties: It is a virtual image: no light actually

passes through the image. Orientation: upright (the same

orientation as the object). Size: smaller than the object. Location: between the mirror and the

focal point F.

Dr. Jie Zou PHY 1371 10

Ray Diagram for a Concave Mirror

Consider three situations: (a), (b) and (c).

Question: Is a makeup mirror concave or convex?

(a)

(b)

(c)

Dr. Jie Zou PHY 1371 11

Mirror Equation Mirror equation:

(1/do) + (1/di) = 1/f do (object distance): distance from the mirror to

the object. di (image distance): distance from the mirror to

the image. f: the focal length of the spherical mirror.

Magnification, m: m = hi/ho= - di/do

hi: height of the image ho: height of the object

Dr. Jie Zou PHY 1371 12

Sign Conventions for the Mirror Equation

Focal length f >0 for concave mirrors f<0 for convex mirrors

Magnification m>0 for upright images m<0 for inverted images

Image distance di >0 for images in front of a mirror (real images) di<0 for images behind a mirror (virtual images)

Object distance do>0 for objects in front of a mirror (real objects) do<0 for objects behind a mirror (virtual objects)

Dr. Jie Zou PHY 1371 13

Examples Example 36.4 The image formed by a

concave mirror: Assume that a certain spherical mirror has a focal length of +10.0 cm. Locate and describe the image for object distances of (A) 25.0 cm, (B) 10.0 cm, and (c) 5.00 cm.

Example 36.5 The image from a convex mirror: An anti-shopping mirror, as the one shown in the figure, shows an image of a woman who is located 3.0 m from the mirror. The focal length of the mirror is -0.25 m. Find (A) the position of her image and (B) the magnification of the image.

Dr. Jie Zou PHY 1371 14

Example: Problem #13

A certain Christmas tree ornament is a silver sphere having a diameter of 8.50 cm. Determine an object location for which the size of the reflected image is three-fourths the size of the object. Use a principal-ray diagram to arrive at a description of the image.

Dr. Jie Zou PHY 1371 15

Homework

Ch. 36, P. 1168, Problems: #2, 7, 13, 14.