bykerboy011 said:
So I've got to give a speech for a class soon with the informative topic of what is light. Light is just what we call the visible portion of the spectrum. How can i go about defining this to a group of college kids in a way they can understand?
thanks
I think the important message for you to get across is light is not a particle or a wave. It is LIGHT but it does have particle-like and wave-like properties. The wave-like properties are really quite like the mechanical waves you can see around you, in many ways and that is fairly easy to talk about with some certainty. You can measure the wavelength, it will reflect and refract according to the same sort of laws that sound and water waves do. Also, you get diffraction according to the same sums that describe the diffraction of sound etc.. These are things you can easily talk to a class about and you can even give pictures (loads available on the web) which fit in with some sort of 'reality'.
BUT, when you try to talk about the particular nature of light, you run into all sorts of difficulties and the popular model of photons as particles that comes into most peoples' heads is really no good at all. Photons are not not not the slightest bit like little bullets. They have not been measured to have any size or extent, they have no mass, if you want to consider them traveling between A and B then they could be 'anywhere' in between and you can only say where they are / were by actually destroying them in the process. You can say that they more or less have to be in two places at once, to explain how you get a simple interference pattern. Despite the fact that he was a pretty clever bloke (no doubt about that), Richard Feynman really didn't help when he insisted that photons "are particles" because the sort of particle he almost certainly meant is not what yer average bloke has in mind. I think he sort of failed to realize just how much smarter he was than the people he was lecturing to. If you, as a layman, want to talk about photons to very uninformed people then I can only suggest that you get the message across that photons are, in fact, very weird and mysterious. It is possible to describe many phenomena by talking in terms of the probabilities of photons being in some places more than in other places (like in the main beam of a torch) but you can't approach the simplest examples of diffraction without getting seriously heavy and being misunderstood.
If you want to talk about light then I could suggest an historical approach. You can start with the Tactile Theory (loads of links about it) and the later Corpuscular Theory. Then move on to the wave theory - for which there are loads of historical resources. Then you can introduce Planck's work which showed that light (all em radiation) must be quantised (when the word 'particle' sort of got re-introduced into the argument). Move on through Einstein's work on the Photoelectric effect, which confirms that em energy comes in specific quanta and that the amount of energy in a quantum is determined by the wavelength.
Of course they will expect you to mention photons and you would do them an immense favour by warning them that the popular models are not very helpful because of all the false predictions they lead to. There's a fine line to be drawn here because if you tell them "it's all too hard for you to understand so don't bother" then it will turn them off. You could, however, emphasise the mysterious nature of the photon and of the many different things that it is NOT.
God only knows what you do when it's time for questions . . . . . . . Good luck.
btw, how old are the members of the class?