Can air, glass, and water slow down the speed of light?

  • Thread starter Thread starter billy_boy_999
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Speed
AI Thread Summary
Light does not actually slow down in air, glass, or water; instead, it appears to travel slower due to the absorption and re-emission of photons by atoms in these media. Photons carry energy that can excite electrons to higher energy levels, and when electrons return to their original state, they emit photons, contributing to the delay. The index of refraction affects how different wavelengths of light are refracted, influenced by the lattice structure of the material. Light generally does not travel in a straight line through these media due to scattering and absorption processes. Conservation of momentum plays a role in the direction of re-emitted photons, ensuring they are emitted in various directions rather than solely in the original direction.
billy_boy_999
Messages
131
Reaction score
0
how does air/glass/water slow down light?
 
Science news on Phys.org
It doesn't really.. light speed remains the same. However, photons are absorbed and re-emitted on the way through the medium and it is the time that this takes that makes them appear to travel slower.
 
Why are they absorbed and re-emitted? How?
 
Basically photons carry a certain amount of energy with them. Electrons bound to an atom (not free electrons) will be able to absorb this energy and fly up an energy level or two. When they go back down they will emit a photon.

Question, does the index of refraction reflect colors of different wavelengths differently because the latice structure of the compound? Also, how come there is no light that goes straight, or is there just a tiny amount due to probability of not being scattered.
 
Also, how come there is no light that goes straight

Light moves "straight" through a vacuum.
 
Goalie_Ca said:
Basically photons carry a certain amount of energy with them. Electrons bound to an atom (not free electrons) will be able to absorb this energy and fly up an energy level or two. When they go back down they will emit a photon.
Why is it then re-emitted in the same (or opposite, whatever you want) direction that it has been absorbed?
 
kuengb said:
Why is it then re-emitted in the same (or opposite, whatever you want) direction that it has been absorbed?

Conservation of momentum.
 
Back
Top