Most of our discussion of refraction in this unit has
pertained to the refraction of light at a
distinct boundary. As light is transmitted across the boundary from one
material to another, there is a change in speed, which
causes a change in direction of the light wave. The boundaries that we have
been focusing on have been distinct interfaces between two recognizably
different materials. The boundary between the glass of a fish tank and the
surrounding air or the boundary between the water in a pool and the surrounding
air are examples of distinct interfaces between two recognizably different materials.
It has been mentioned in our discussion that the refraction
or bending of light occurs at the boundary between
two materials; and once a light wave has crossed the boundary it travels in a
straight line. The discussion has presumed that the medium is a uniformmedium. A uniform medium is a medium whose optical density is everywhere the
same within the medium. A uniform medium is the same everywhere from its top
boundary to its bottom boundary and from its left boundary to its right
boundary. But not every medium is a uniform medium, and the fact that air can
sometimes form a non-uniform medium leads to an interesting refraction
phenomenon - the formation of mirages.
A mirage is an optical phenomenon that creates the
illusion of water and results from the refraction of light through a
non-uniform medium. Mirages are most commonly observed on sunny days when
driving down a roadway. As you drive down the roadway, there appears to be a
puddle of water on the road several yards (maybe one-hundred yards) in front of
the car. Of course, when you arrive at the perceived location of the puddle,
you recognize that the puddle is not there. Instead, the puddle of water appears
to be another one-hundred yards in front of you. You could carefully match the
perceived location of the water to a roadside object; but when you arrive at
that object, the puddle of water is still not on the roadway. The appearance of
the water is simply an illusion.
Mirages occur on sunny days. The role of the sun is to heat
the roadway to high temperatures. This heated roadway in turn heats the
surrounding air, keeping the air just above the roadway at higher temperatures
than that day's average air temperature. Hot air tends to be less optically
dense than cooler air. As such, a non-uniform medium has been created by the
heating of the roadway and the air just above it. While light will travel in a
straight line through a uniform medium, it will refract when traveling through
a non-uniform medium. If a driver looks down at the roadway at a very low angle
(that is, at a position nearly one hundred yards away), light from objects
above the roadway will follow a curved path to the driver's eye as shown in the
diagram below.
Light that is traveling downward into this less optically
dense air begins to speed up. Though there isn't a distinct boundary between
two media, there is a change in speed of a light wave. As expected, a change in
speed is accompanied by a change in direction. If there were a distinct
boundary between two media, then there would be a bending of this light ray
away from the normal. For this light ray to bend away from the normal (towards
the boundary), the ray would begin to bend more parallel to
the roadway and then bend upwards towards the cooler air. As such, a person in
a car sighting downward at the roadway will see an object located above the
roadway.
Of course, this is not a usual event. When was the last time
that you looked downward at a surface and saw an object above the surface?
While not a usual event, it does happen. For instance, suppose you place a
mirror on the floor and look downward at the floor; you will see objects
located above the floor due to the reflection of light by the mirror. Even a
glass window placed on the floor will reflect light from objects above the
floor. If you look downward at the glass window at a low enough angle, then you
will see objects located above the floor. Or suppose that you are standing on
the shore of a calm pond and look downward at the water; you might see objects
above the pond due to the reflection of light by the water.
So when you experience this sunny day phenomenon, your mind
must quickly make sense of how you can look downward at the roadway and see an
object located above the road. In the process of making sense of this event,
your mind draws upon past experiences. Searching the database of stored
experiences, your mind is interested in an explanation of why the eye can sight
downward at a surface and see an object that is located above the surface. In
the process of searching, it comes up with three possible explanations based
upon past experiences. Your mind subtly ponders these three options.
· There is a
mirror on the road. Someone must have for some reason placed a mirror on the
road. The mirror is reflecting light and that is why I see an image of the oncoming
truck when I look downward at the road.
· There is a
glass window on the road. My gosh, do you believe
it! Someone has left a glass window on the road. The glass window is reflecting
light and that is why I see an image of the oncoming truck when I look downward
at the road.
· There is
water on the road. It must have rained last night and there is a puddle of
water left on the road. The water is reflecting light and that is why I see an
image of the oncoming truck when I look downward at the road.
Of the three possible explanations of the image of the truck,
only one makes a lot of sense to the mind - there is water on the road. After
all, while both glass windows and mirrors can reflect light, nowhere in your
mind's database of past experiences is there an account of a mirror or glass
window being seen on a roadway. Yet there are plenty of times that a water
puddle has been observed to be present on a roadway. Smart person that you are,
you then conclude that there is a puddle of water on the road that is causing
you to see objects located above the road when you sight downward at the road.
The illusion is complete.