The inverse square law for point light sources inside an opaque medium

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on the behavior of light from a point source within an opaque medium, emphasizing that while the inverse square law applies in a vacuum, it changes in a medium with a variable absorption coefficient σ(x). The key insight is that the light intensity will still depend on distance but will not follow the inverse square law alone; instead, it combines the effects of absorption and spreading loss. The intensity can be expressed as a function of distance, incorporating an exponential decay due to absorption. The final understanding is that the power per unit area in an opaque medium decreases as exp(-λr)/r², effectively combining the inverse square law with absorption effects. This highlights the complexity of light transport in non-transparent media.
mgamito
Messages
7
Reaction score
0
Hello all,

I already know that the radiant intensity of a point light source falls off with the inverse square of the distance to the source. This, however, only happens in a vacuum. My question is, what is the more general law for a point source inside an opaque medium with a known absorption coefficient σ(x) that may vary across space. From symmetry considerations alone, I would expect that the result will still be a function only of the distance to the light source, as before, just not an inverse square power anymore. The actual function will, of course, depend on σ(x) and should be the outcome of some 1D differential equation whose control variable is the distance to the source - it is the form of this 1D equation that I am looking for.

To clarify a bit further, the above absorption coefficient occurs in the light transport equation when stating that the derivative of radiance L(t) along a light ray parameterised by t is:

dL(t)/dt = -σ(t) L(t)

or stating the same in 3D space:

(ω.∇) L(x, ω) = -σ(x) L(x, ω)

where L(x, ω) is the radiance at point x in the direction ω.

Thank you,
manuel
 
Science news on Phys.org
Both factors apply. The inverse square plus (or, rather, multiplied by) the absorption per metre travelled.
 
Hi Sophie, you mean that there is an effective absorption coefficient given by σ(t)/t^2 ? I don't see how that would work because in an optically transparent medium (σ = 0), the inverse square term would vanish together with the σ, which we know is not true.

manuel
 
Absorption PER METRE. It's exponential with distance (in addition to the spreading loss).
 
Better way to look at it, perhaps, is that in vacuum, the total power of the radiation passing through a spherical shell around a point source is a constant regardless of shell radius. This gives you inverse square per unit area. In opaque medium, the total power drops of as exp(-λr). Therefore, power per unit area drops as exp(-λr)/r²
 
Thank you both - I understand it now. I didn't imagine the solution was so simple as to just multiply the inverse square with the absorption (after application of the exponential to the latter).
 
Thread 'A quartet of epi-illumination methods'
Well, it took almost 20 years (!!!), but I finally obtained a set of epi-phase microscope objectives (Zeiss). The principles of epi-phase contrast is nearly identical to transillumination phase contrast, but the phase ring is a 1/8 wave retarder rather than a 1/4 wave retarder (because with epi-illumination, the light passes through the ring twice). This method was popular only for a very short period of time before epi-DIC (differential interference contrast) became widely available. So...
I am currently undertaking a research internship where I am modelling the heating of silicon wafers with a 515 nm femtosecond laser. In order to increase the absorption of the laser into the oxide layer on top of the wafer it was suggested we use gold nanoparticles. I was tasked with modelling the optical properties of a 5nm gold nanoparticle, in particular the absorption cross section, using COMSOL Multiphysics. My model seems to be getting correct values for the absorption coefficient and...
Back
Top