Why Is Light Not Refracted at the Planar Edge of a Planoconvex Lens?

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In summary, the conversation discusses the refraction of light through a planoconvex lens and why there is no refraction when the light strikes the planar edge. It is explained that this is because the light is traveling slower when it enters the denser medium, causing it to turn towards the normal of the curve. The website that the diagram came from is also referenced, with clarification that the website did not say there was no refraction at the planar surface, but rather that the refraction is smaller compared to the curved surface. The conversation ends with a clarification that the lens effect is shared between both interfaces and their "effort" is smaller, resulting in smaller aberrations.
  • #1
slakedlime
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[SOLVED] Basic optics (GCSEs in 3 days, please help)

Homework Statement


Here is a diagram of light passing through the curved edge of a planoconvex lens.
plano.jpg


When a light ray strikes the planar edge, it is not refracted. Why?

2. The attempt at a solution
The website the diagram came from: http://www-optics.unine.ch/education/optics_tutorials/plano_convex_lens_aberration.html

Light is refracted when it strikes the curved edge of the lens. I know that when light it is not refracted if it passes at 90 degrees to the border between the media. In the diagram, this isn't the case.

I've studied refraction with semicircular glass plates, but light is refracted when it passes out of the straight edge.

Any hints would be really useful.
 
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  • #2
It's to do with light traveling slower when it enters a denser medium.
If it strikes the curved edge then one end of the light ray will travel slower through the glass while the other is traveling at the original velocity through the air. This causes the light to turn towards the normal of the curve.
If the light ray hits the planar edge, it still enters into a denser medium and will have a lower velocity, but it will travel in a straight line. Imagine a car being the light ray and the glass being sand. When the car drives into the sand at an angle, one wheel will get onto it first, because the sand has more friction, the wheel will travel slower than the other wheel still on the road. This creates a turning effect. If you imagine a car driving into the sand at 90 degress it will not change direction.
Hope this helped.
 
  • #3
slakedlime, as you have correctly pointed out, the light is refracted by the planar interface. I'm not really sure what they are trying to say... perhaps someone else has seen this before and can enlighten us.
Unless they mean reversing the lens so that the normally incident rays arrive at the planar surface first?
 
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  • #4
mda said:
Unless they mean reversing the lens so that the normally incident rays arrive at the planar surface first?

I know that incident rays arriving first at the planar surface aren't refracted because they strike the glass at 90 degrees (along the normal). I found that diagram as an applet on this site (which is about chromatic aberrations):

http://www-optics.unine.ch/education/optics_tutorials/plano_convex_lens_aberration.html

I pasted one of the diagrams here. It seems that light isn't bent after coming out of the planar surface. Maybe I'm mistaken? :redface:
 
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  • #5
In the diagram you give (first post) it is refracted, you just cannot see it clearly, because it's not by a lot.
 
  • #6
Maybe if you ignore whatever is happening first on the right (assuming the light is going right->left), and imagine the light is just a 'horizontal' beam, like the one in the centre.

Are they not just asking you to talk about the 'normal', as you did above?
 
  • #7
timothy123 said:
Maybe if you ignore whatever is happening first on the right (assuming the light is going right->left), and imagine the light is just a 'horizontal' beam, like the one in the centre.

Would it be logical to assume that all the light rays are horizontal?

bsimmo said:
In the diagram you give (first post) it is refracted, you just cannot see it clearly, because it's not by a lot.
That's what I first thought, but the website said otherwise. It said that light striking the planar surface wasn't refracted. Maybe the writer was simplifying because the difference is so little?
 
  • #8
slakedlime said:
When a light ray strikes the planar edge, it is not refracted. Why?
I'd say it was just a sloppy diagram. Light is refracted at both surfaces.
 
  • #9
I'm a beginning secondary science teacher (admittedly with a biology specialism), and if I had to second guess a GCSE paper, I'd say it was simply asking why there is no refraction at A, whilst there is at B, in the diagram below:

http://img151.imageshack.us/img151/3686/flowroot5110jd8.png

Which you can do, no problem I think! I'm sure you're on track for a good mark.

Obviously, it's hard to say without seeing the paper.. :-)
 
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  • #10
slakedlime said:
That's what I first thought, but the website said otherwise. It said that light striking the planar surface wasn't refracted. Maybe the writer was simplifying because the difference is so little?
I think you are misreading what the website said. The only mention I saw was this:
"As you can see in the previous applet, if the light falls upon the planar interface, it is not bent, and the whole effect will be done by the curved interface. On the other way, the whole lens effect is shared between the two interfaces. Their "effort" is smaller for each interface, so the aberrations are smaller."​
In the first sentence, they are talking about parallel rays striking the plane surface first; since the rays are perpendicular to the plane surface, there is no refraction. But the second sentence correctly states that when parallel rays strike the curved surface first, refraction occurs at both interfaces.
 
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  • #11
Oh, thank-you for pointing that out! :redface: I understand it now. Thanks for your help and time everyone!
 

1. What are the main principles of optics?

The main principles of optics include reflection, refraction, and the behavior of light in different mediums. Reflection is when light bounces off a surface at an angle equal to the angle at which it hits the surface. Refraction is the bending of light as it passes through different mediums with varying densities. These principles are essential in understanding how light travels and interacts with objects.

2. How does light interact with different objects?

Light can interact with objects in several ways, including absorption, transmission, and scattering. When light hits an object, it can be absorbed, meaning it is converted into another form of energy, such as heat. It can also be transmitted, meaning it passes through the object without being absorbed. Lastly, light can be scattered, which is when it is redirected in different directions by the object's surface.

3. What is the difference between convex and concave lenses?

Convex lenses are thicker in the middle and thinner at the edges, causing light rays passing through them to converge or come together. These lenses are commonly used in magnifying glasses and microscopes. On the other hand, concave lenses are thinner in the middle and thicker at the edges, causing light rays to diverge or spread out. These lenses are commonly used in eyeglasses to correct nearsightedness.

4. How does the human eye work?

The human eye works similarly to a camera, with the cornea and lens focusing light onto the retina at the back of the eye. The retina contains photoreceptor cells called rods and cones, which convert light into electrical signals and send them to the brain via the optic nerve. The brain then interprets these signals to create the images we see.

5. What is the relationship between wavelength and color?

Wavelength is the distance between two consecutive peaks or troughs of a wave, and it is inversely related to the color of light. This means that shorter wavelengths correspond to colors with higher frequencies, such as blue and violet, while longer wavelengths correspond to colors with lower frequencies, such as red and orange. This relationship is why we see different colors in the visible light spectrum.

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