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11.S: Geometric Optics and Image Formation (Summary)

  • Page ID
    32262
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    Key Terms

    aberration distortion in an image caused by departures from the small-angle approximation
    accommodation use of the ciliary muscles to adjust the shape of the eye lens for focusing on near or far objects
    angular magnification ratio of the angle subtended by an object observed with a magnifier to that observed by the naked eye
    apparent depth depth at which an object is perceived to be located with respect to an interface between two media
    Cassegrain design arrangement of an objective and eyepiece such that the light-gathering concave mirror has a hole in the middle, and light then is incident on an eyepiece lens
    charge-coupled device (CCD) semiconductor chip that converts a light image into tiny pixels that can be converted into electronic signals of color and intensity
    coma similar to spherical aberration, but arises when the incoming rays are not parallel to the optical axis
    compound microscope microscope constructed from two convex lenses, the first serving as the eyepiece and the second serving as the objective lens
    concave mirror spherical mirror with its reflecting surface on the inner side of the sphere; the mirror forms a “cave”
    converging (or convex) lens lens in which light rays that enter it parallel converge into a single point on the opposite side
    convex mirror spherical mirror with its reflecting surface on the outer side of the sphere
    curved mirror mirror formed by a curved surface, such as spherical, elliptical, or parabolic
    diverging (or concave) lens lens that causes light rays to bend away from its optical axis
    eyepiece lens or combination of lenses in an optical instrument nearest to the eye of the observer
    far point furthest point an eye can see in focus
    farsightedness (or hyperopia) visual defect in which near objects appear blurred because their images are focused behind the retina rather than on the retina; a farsighted person can see far objects clearly but near objects appear blurred
    first focus or object focus object located at this point will result in an image created at infinity on the opposite side of a spherical interface between two media
    focal length distance along the optical axis from the focal point to the optical element that focuses the light rays
    focal plane plane that contains the focal point and is perpendicular to the optical axis
    focal point for a converging lens or mirror, the point at which converging light rays cross; for a diverging lens or mirror, the point from which diverging light rays appear to originate
    image distance distance of the image from the central axis of the optical element that produces the image
    linear magnification ratio of image height to object height
    magnification ratio of image size to object size
    near point closest point an eye can see in focus
    nearsightedness (or myopia) visual defect in which far objects appear blurred because their images are focused in front of the retina rather than on the retina; a nearsighted person can see near objects clearly but far objects appear blurred
    net magnification (MnetMnet) of the compound microscope is the product of the linear magnification of the objective and the angular magnification of the eyepiece
    Newtonian design arrangement of an objective and eyepiece such that the focused light from the concave mirror was reflected to one side of the tube into an eyepiece
    object distance

    distance of the object from the central axis of the optical element that produces its image

    objective lens nearest to the object being examined.
    optical axis axis about which the mirror is rotationally symmetric; you can rotate the mirror about this axis without changing anything
    optical power (P) inverse of the focal length of a lens, with the focal length expressed in meters. The optical power P of a lens is expressed in units of diopters D; that is, \(\displaystyle 1D=1/m=1m^{−1}\)
    plane mirror plane (flat) reflecting surface
    ray tracing technique that uses geometric constructions to find and characterize the image formed by an optical system
    real image image that can be projected onto a screen because the rays physically go through the image
    second focus or image focus for a converging interface, the point where a bundle of parallel rays refracting at a spherical interface; for a diverging interface, the point at which the backward continuation of the refracted rays will converge between two media will focus
    simple magnifier (or magnifying glass) converging lens that produces a virtual image of an object that is within the focal length of the lens
    small-angle approximation approximation that is valid when the size of a spherical mirror is significantly smaller than the mirror’s radius; in this approximation, spherical aberration is negligible and the mirror has a well-defined focal point
    spherical aberration distortion in the image formed by a spherical mirror when rays are not all focused at the same point
    thin-lens approximation assumption that the lens is very thin compared to the first image distance
    vertex point where the mirror’s surface intersects with the optical axis
    virtual image image that cannot be projected on a screen because the rays do not physically go through the image, they only appear to originate from the image

    Key Equations

    Image distance in a plane mirror \(\displaystyle d_o=−d_i\)
    Focal length for a spherical mirror \(\displaystyle f=\frac{R}{2}\)
    Mirror equation \(\displaystyle \frac{1}{d_o}+\frac{1}{d_i}=\frac{1}{f}\)
    Magnification of a spherical mirror \(\displaystyle m=\frac{h_i}{h_o}=−\frac{d_i}{d_o}\)
    Sign convention for mirrors
    Focal length \(\displaystyle f\) +for concave mirror
    −for conve x mirror
    Object distance \(\displaystyle d_o\) +for real object
    −for virtual object
    Image distance \(\displaystyle d_i\) +for real image
    −for virtual image
    Magnification \(\displaystyle m\) +for upright image
    −for inverted image
    Apparent depth equation \(\displaystyle h_i=(\frac{n_2}{n_1})h_o\)
    Spherical interface equation \(\displaystyle \frac{n_1}{d_o}+\frac{n_2}{d_i}=\frac{n_2−n_1}{R}\)
    The thin-lens equation \(\displaystyle \frac{1}{d_o}+\frac{1}{d_i}=\frac{1}{f}\)
    The lens maker’s equation \(\displaystyle \frac{1}{f}=(\frac{n_2}{n_1}−1)(\frac{1}{R_1}−\frac{1}{R_2})\)
    The magnification m of an object \(\displaystyle m≡\frac{h_i}{h_o}=−\frac{d_i}{d_o}\)
    Optical power \(\displaystyle P=\frac{1}{f}\)
    Optical power of thin, closely spaced lenses \(\displaystyle P_{total}=P_{lens1}+P_{lens2}+P_{lens3}+⋯\)
    Angular magnification M of a simple magnifier \(\displaystyle M=\frac{θ_{image}}{θ_{object}}\)

    Angular magnification of an object a distance L from the eye for a convex lens of focal length f held a distance ℓ from the eye

    \(\displaystyle M=(\frac{25cm}{L})(1+\frac{L−ℓ}{f})\)
    Range of angular magnification for a given lens for a person with a near point of 25 cm \(\displaystyle \frac{25cm}{f}≤M≤1+\frac{25cm}{f}\)
    Net magnification of compound microscope \(\displaystyle M_{net}=m^{obj}M^{eye}=−\frac{d^{obj}_i(f^{eye}+25cm)}{f^{obj}f^{eye}}\)

    Summary

    2.1 Images Formed by Plane Mirrors

    • A plane mirror always forms a virtual image (behind the mirror).
    • The image and object are the same distance from a flat mirror, the image size is the same as the object size, and the image is upright.

    2.2 Spherical Mirrors

    • Spherical mirrors may be concave (converging) or convex (diverging).
    • The focal length of a spherical mirror is one-half of its radius of curvature: \(\displaystyle f=R/2\).
    • The mirror equation and ray tracing allow you to give a complete description of an image formed by a spherical mirror.
    • Spherical aberration occurs for spherical mirrors but not parabolic mirrors; comatic aberration occurs for both types of mirrors.

    2.3 Images Formed by Refraction

    This section explains how a single refracting interface forms images.

    • When an object is observed through a plane interface between two media, then it appears at an apparent distance \(\displaystyle h_i\) that differs from the actual distance \(\displaystyle h_o:h_i=(n_2/n_1)h_o\).
    • An image is formed by the refraction of light at a spherical interface between two media of indices of refraction \(\displaystyle n_1\) and \(\displaystyle n_2\).
    • Image distance depends on the radius of curvature of the interface, location of the object, and the indices of refraction of the media.

    2.4 Thin Lenses

    • Two types of lenses are possible: converging and diverging. A lens that causes light rays to bend toward (away from) its optical axis is a converging (diverging) lens.
    • For a converging lens, the focal point is where the converging light rays cross; for a diverging lens, the focal point is the point from which the diverging light rays appear to originate.
    • The distance from the center of a thin lens to its focal point is called the focal length f.
    • Ray tracing is a geometric technique to determine the paths taken by light rays through thin lenses.
    • A real image can be projected onto a screen.
    • A virtual image cannot be projected onto a screen.
    • A converging lens forms either real or virtual images, depending on the object location; a diverging lens forms only virtual images.

    2.5 The Eye

    • Image formation by the eye is adequately described by the thin-lens equation.
    • The eye produces a real image on the retina by adjusting its focal length in a process called accommodation.
    • Nearsightedness, or myopia, is the inability to see far objects and is corrected with a diverging lens to reduce the optical power of the eye.
    • Farsightedness, or hyperopia, is the inability to see near objects and is corrected with a converging lens to increase the optical power of the eye.
    • In myopia and hyperopia, the corrective lenses produce images at distances that fall between the person’s near and far points so that images can be seen clearly.

    2.6 The Camera

    • Cameras use combinations of lenses to create an image for recording.
    • Digital photography is based on charge-coupled devices (CCDs) that break an image into tiny “pixels” that can be converted into electronic signals.

    2.7 The Simple Magnifier

    • A simple magnifier is a converging lens and produces a magnified virtual image of an object located within the focal length of the lens.
    • Angular magnification accounts for magnification of an image created by a magnifier. It is equal to the ratio of the angle subtended by the image to that subtended by the object when the object is observed by the unaided eye.
    • Angular magnification is greater for magnifying lenses with smaller focal lengths.
    • Simple magnifiers can produce as great as tenfold (10×) magnification.

    2.8 Microscopes and Telescopes

    • Many optical devices contain more than a single lens or mirror. These are analyzed by considering each element sequentially. The image formed by the first is the object for the second, and so on. The same ray-tracing and thin-lens techniques developed in the previous sections apply to each lens element.
    • The overall magnification of a multiple-element system is the product of the linear magnifications of its individual elements times the angular magnification of the eyepiece. For a two-element system with an objective and an eyepiece, this is

    \(\displaystyle M=m^{obj}M^{eye}.\) (2.41)

    where \(\displaystyle m^{obj}\) is the linear magnification of the objective and \(\displaystyle M^{eye}\) is the angular magnification of the eyepiece.

    • The microscope is a multiple-element system that contains more than a single lens or mirror. It allows us to see detail that we could not to see with the unaided eye. Both the eyepiece and objective contribute to the magnification. The magnification of a compound microscope with the image at infinity is

    \(\displaystyle M_{net}=−\frac{(16cm)(25cm)}{f^{obj}f^{eye}}\). (2.42)

    In this equation, 16 cm is the standardized distance between the image-side focal point of the objective lens and the object-side focal point of the eyepiece, 25 cm is the normal near point distance, \(\displaystyle f^{obj}\) and \(\displaystyle f^{eye}\) are the focal distances for the objective lens and the eyepiece, respectively.

    • Simple telescopes can be made with two lenses. They are used for viewing objects at large distances.
    • The angular magnification M for a telescope is given by

    \(\displaystyle M=−\frac{f^{obj}}{f^{eye}}\), (2.43)

    where \(\displaystyle f^{obj}\) and \(\displaystyle f^{eye}\) are the focal lengths of the objective lens and the eyepiece, respectively.


    This page titled 11.S: Geometric Optics and Image Formation (Summary) is shared under a CC BY license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by OpenStax.

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