Light production

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Luminous Sources http://afonson311.files.wordpress.com/2011/03/sunset

Transcript of Light production

Page 1: Light production

Luminous Sources

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Light Production

Luminous source• Produces its own light• Example: sun, light bulb, lit

match

Non-luminous source• Does not produce own light• Seen only by using

reflected light

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Luminous Sources

• Incandescence• Electric discharge• Phosphorescence• Fluorescence• Chemiluminescence• Bioluminescence• Triboluminescence• Light-emitting diode (LED)• Laser

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Heated tungsten filament glows

Incandescence • Production of light as a

result of high temperature• Air from bulb removed and

replaced with non-reactive gas

• Prevents filament from reacting with oxygen and bursting into flame

• 5-10% of energy converted to visible light

• Most converted to infrared light (heat)

• Inefficient

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Electric Dischargelight production by passing an electric current through a gas

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Electric Discharge

• Neon lights = Geissler tubes (1855)• Vacuum pump removed most of the air from a closed tube• Remaining air glowed when an electric current passed through• Colour of glow depended on gas inside tube

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Phosphorescence• Light production by the absorption of UV light

resulting in the emission of visible light over an extended period of time

• Objects coated with phosphors that absorb UV light. Phosphors keep some of the energy and over time release some of the lower energy as visible light.

• Example: glow-in-the-dark

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Fluorescence

• Light production by the absorption of UV light resulting in immediate emission of visible light

• Example: fluorescent dyes in detergent, highlighter pens, fluorescent lighting

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Fluorescent Light

Structure of Fluorescent Lights• Light tube filled with low-pressure mercury vapour and an inert gas

(e.g. Argon)• Inner surface of tube coated with fluorescent material known as

phosphors

How Fluorescent lights work (video) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ur5yPa4_j3c&NR=1 1. Electric Discharge: Electric current causes Hg atoms to emit UV light2. Fluorescence: UV light strikes phosphors which convert the energy

into visible light

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Fluorescent Light

Pro• Same light output as

incandescent bulb but less heat produced

• Uses less electricity for same amount of light

• Lasts longer

Con• More expensive than

incandescent bulbs• Contain mercury and

should be treated like hazardous waste for disposal

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Chemiluminescence

• Production of light as the result of a chemical reaction

• “Cold light”: Little to no heat is produced

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Chemiluminescence

How light sticks work:• One chemical in a

narrow small glass vial• Other chemical in main

body• Bending stick breaks

glass vial• Chemical mix in the

main body• Reaction produces

visible light

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• Camping• Law enforcement• Military personnel• Entertainment venues• Emergencies• Underwater divers (source

has no moving parts, completely sealed)

• Hazardous environments where a spark could be dangerous (source does not require electric current)

Chemiluminescence Application

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Bioluminescence• Production of light in living organisms as a result

of a chemical reaction• Little to no heat produced• Function: protection from predators, lure prey,

attract mates• Example: luciferase enzyme in fireflies catalyze

oxidation of luciferin protein to produce light

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Angler Fish

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Bioluminescence• Green Fluorescent Protein (GFP): exhibits bright

green fluorescence when exposed to blue light• Originally discovered in jelly fish• Now used extensively in research as a marker

for gene expression

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Triboluminescence• Production of light from friction (rubbing), pressure

(crushing) or mechanical shock (scratching) • Explained by the breaking of chemical bonds in the

material• Most often seen in rubbing of certain crystals• Also works with Wintergreen hard candy, pulling apart 2

pieces of duct tape, peeling transparent Scotch tape

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Light-emitting diode (LED)

• Production of light by an electric current flowing in a diode

• Diode: a simple type of semiconductors

• Semiconductor: a material that allows electric current to flow in only one direction

• Applications: Christmas lights, traffic lights

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Light-Emitting Diode Comparison

Compared to incandescent bulbs

Pros• No filament (doesn’t burn out)• Not much heat production (less

wasted energy)• More energy efficient (longer

lifespan, lower power usage)

Cons• Produces a cool ‘blue’ light

instead of the warm ‘yellow’ light

Compared to compact fluorescent bulbs

Pros• No toxic mercury• More energy efficient (longer

lifespan, lower power usage)

Cons• Higher up-front costs

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LASER

• Light

• Amplication by

• Stimulated

• Emission of

• Radiation

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Properties of Laser LightLasers • emit wavelengths of

the same energy level• results in a light beam

of a single pure colour• monochromatic

Incandescent• emit wavelengths of

many different energy levels

• results in white light (combination of all colours)

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Properties of Laser Light

• Waves are directional (travel in the same direction)

• Results in light that is concentrated into one narrow beam and can travel great distances without spreading out

• Waves are coherent (wave fronts launch in unison)

• Results in light that is very intense

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Application of Lasers- Manufacturing: cutting glass, burning through steel

- Astronomy: measure Earth-moon distance

- Research: surveyor to measure distance

- Entertainment: laser light shows

- Military: Boeing airborne laser, tactical high energy laser

- Media technology: CD, DVD

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Military Application of LasersAirborne Laser (ABL) (video)http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0LKk1bTL6fk

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Military Application of Lasers

Tactical High Energy Laser (THEL) (video)http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qpuU-BEadxI

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Media Technology Application• CD & DVDs are read by lasers• Pits: bumps on discs that scatter laser light

in all directions• Land: non-bumps that reflect laser light• Reflected light is converted into binary

code (0’s and 1’s)

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DVD & Blu-Ray Construction

DVD Blu-Ray

Laser Red Blue

Wavelength 650 nm 405 nm

Pit 0.4 µm 0.15 µm

Track pitch 0.74 µm 0.32 µm

Storage 4.7 GB 25 GBhttp://electronics.howstuffworks.com/blu-ray1.htm

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