New Reply

Direct photons in one direction Help?

 
Share Thread Thread Tools
Jul3-12, 12:40 AM   #1
 

Direct photons in one direction Help?


Hi all,

So I'm working on a project, and I'm having some design issues. I need a method of taking a white light source, and directing all of the photons that it emits in a single direction. I have a model in mind, involving an arrangement of layered components.

Bottom layer: Light source. Rectangular panel as simple as a thin box with opaque or reflective sides and bottom, a transparent top, and some LEDs inside. This is only an example. Layer one just needs to emit white light.

Top layer: Placed on top of the bottom layer. Photons emitted from the bottom layer that pass through this layer travel in a perpendicular direction (or close to) when they leave through the other side.

So obviously my confusion is with the top layer. The only idea that has come to me deals with using layers of materials with specific indices of refraction such that photons creating too large of an incident angle will undergo total internal reflection. The problem with this is that it requires some material with a sufficently large index of refraction which I don't even think exists.

Any suggestions? Places to start researching?
For any information you can provide, thank you for your help!
PhysOrg.com
PhysOrg
physics news on PhysOrg.com

>> As chaos celebrates its 50th birthday, biophysicist develops a new method to visualize it
>> Novel features of helium-3 superfluidity discovered with new SQUID detector chip
>> Physics of 'green waves' could make city traffic flow more smoothly
Jul3-12, 03:44 AM   #2
 
Recognitions:
Homework Helper Homework Help
I need a method of taking a white light source, and directing all of the photons that it emits in a single direction.
How would you get white light photons?

Why not make a spherical source and put it at the focus of a converging lens?
Jul3-12, 03:12 PM   #3
 
Quote by Simon Bridge View Post
How would you get white light photons?

Why not make a spherical source and put it at the focus of a converging lens?
As a matter of fact, I really like that idea. I was going for a more rectangular look, which is what prevented me from considering that. But that is definitely one possibility. Whether or not I can use that depends on how precisely I can direct the light. Thanks for the idea! :)
Jul4-12, 02:43 AM   #4
 

Direct photons in one direction Help?


Quote by SuperFrisbie View Post
As a matter of fact, I really like that idea. I was going for a more rectangular look, which is what prevented me from considering that. But that is definitely one possibility. Whether or not I can use that depends on how precisely I can direct the light. Thanks for the idea! :)
For a flatter design and perhaps more possibilities you could think of using a Fresnel lens or zone plate.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fresnel_lens
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zone_plate
New Reply

Tags
direction, light, optics, photon, refraction
Thread Tools


Similar Threads for: Direct photons in one direction Help?
Thread Forum Replies
Is there direct evidence photons attract gravitationally? General Physics 55
When photons hit metals, does the electron created go in a random direction? General Physics 4
Direction taken by photons General Physics 1
Stimulated photons direction: book suggestion. Quantum Physics 13
Why do photons continue in same direction after interaction with transparent media General Physics 22