Interesting Refraction Phenomena
In the Light and Color unit of The
Physics Classroom Tutorial, the visible light spectrum was introduced and
discussed. Visible light, also known as white light, consists of a collection
of component colors. These colors are often observed as light passes through a triangular prism.
Upon passage through the prism, the white light is separated into its
component colors - red, orange, yellow, green, blue and violet. The separation of
visible light into its different colors is known as dispersion. It was mentioned in the Light and Color unit that each color is
characteristic of a distinct wave frequency; and different frequencies of light
waves will bend varying amounts upon passage through a prism. In this unit, we
will investigate the dispersion of light in more detail, pondering the reasons
why different frequencies of light bend or refract different amounts when
passing through the prism.
Earlier in this unit, the concept of optical
density was introduced. Different materials are distinguished from each other by
their different optical densities. The optical density is simply a measure of
the tendency of a material to slow down light as it travels through it. As
mentioned earlier, a light wave traveling through a transparent material
interacts with the atoms of that material. When a light wave impinges upon an
atom of the material, it is absorbed by that atom. The absorbed energy causes
the electrons in the atom to vibrate. If the frequency of the light wave does
not match the resonance frequency of the vibrating electrons, then the light
will be reemitted by the atom at the same frequency at which it impinged upon
it. The light wave then travels through the interatomic vacuum towards the next
atom of the material. Once it impinges upon the next atom, the process of
absorption and re-emission is repeated.
The optical density of a material is the result of the
tendency of the atoms of a material to maintain the absorbed energy of the
light wave in the form of vibrating electrons before reemitting it as a new
electromagnetic disturbance. Thus, while a light wave travels through a vacuum
at a speed of c (3.00 x 108m/s), it travels through a transparent material at
speeds less than c. The index of
refraction value (n) provides a quantitative expression of the optical density of a given
medium. Materials with higher index of refraction values have a tendency to hold onto the
absorbed light energy for greater lengths of time before reemitting it to the
interatomic void. The more closely that the frequency of the light wave matches
the resonant frequency of the electrons of the atoms of a material, the greater
the optical density and the greater the index of refraction. A light wave would
be slowed down to a greater extent when passing through such a material
What was not mentioned earlier in this unit is that the index
of refraction values are dependent upon the frequency of light. For visible
light, the n value does not show a large variation with frequency, but nonetheless it
shows a variation. For instance for some types of glass, the n value for
frequencies of violet light is 1.53; and the n value for
frequencies of red light is 1.51. The absorption and re-emission process causes
the higher frequency (lower wavelength) violet light to travel slower through
crown glass than the lower frequency (higher wavelength) red light. It is this
difference in n value for the varying frequencies(and wavelengths) that causes the dispersion of light by a triangular
prism. Violet light, being slowed down to a greater extent by the absorption
and re-emission process, refracts more than red light. Upon entry of white
light at the first boundary of a triangular prism, there will be a slight
separation of the white light into the component colors of
the spectrum. Upon exiting the triangular prism at the second boundary, the
separation becomes even greater and ROYGBIV is
observed in its splendor.
The amount of overall refraction caused by the passage of a
light ray through a prism is often expressed in terms of the angle of
deviation (). The angle of
deviation is the angle made between the incident ray of light entering the first face of the
prism and the refracted ray that emerges from the second
face of the prism. Because of the different indices of refraction for the
different wavelengths of visible light, the angle of deviation varies with
wavelength. Colors of the visible light spectrum that have shorter wavelengths (BIV)
will deviated more from their original path than the colors with
longer wavelengths (ROY). The emergence of different colors of
light from a triangular prism at different angles leads an observer to see the
component colors of visible light separated from each other.
Of course the discussion of the dispersion of light by
triangular prisms begs the following question: Why doesn't a square or
rectangular prism cause the dispersion of a narrow beam of white light? The
short answer is that it does. The long answer is provided in the following
discussion and illustrated by the diagram below.
Suppose that a flashlight could be covered with black paper
with a slit across it so as to create a beam of white light. And suppose that
the beam of white light with its component colors unseparated were directed at an angle
towards the surface of a rectangular glass prism. As would be expected, the
light would refract towards the normal upon entering the glass and away from
the normal upon exiting the glass. But since the violet light has a shorter
wavelength, it would refract more than the longer wavelength red light. The
refraction of light at the entry location into the rectangular glass prism
would cause a little separation of the white light. However, upon exiting the
glass prism, the refraction takes place in the opposite direction. The light
refracts away from the normal, with the violet light bending a bit more than
the red light. Unlike the passage through the triangular prism with
non-parallel sides, there is no overall angle of deviation for the
various colors of white light. Both the red and the violet components of light
are traveling in the same direction as they were traveling before entry into
the prism. There is however a thin red fringe present on one end of the beam
and thin violet fringe present on the opposite side of the beam. This fringe is
evidence of dispersion. Because there is a different angle of deviation of the
various components of white light after transmission across the first boundary,
the violet is separated ever so slightly from the red. Upon transmission across
the second boundary, the direction of refraction is reversed; yet because the
violet light has traveled further downward when passing through the rectangle it is the
primary color present in the lower edge of the beam. The same can be said for
red light on the upper edge of the beam.
Dispersion of light provides evidence for the existence of a
spectrum of wavelengths present in visible light. It is also the basis for
understanding the formation of rainbows.