Thought experiment with two point sources of light

AI Thread Summary
In a dark room with two point sources of light positioned 10 feet apart, a thick rod placed in front of them will cast multiple shadows. The discussion reveals that each light source can cast its own shadow of the rod, resulting in at least three distinct shadows on the floor: one from each light and one darker area where the shadows overlap. The lack of wall reflection complicates the scenario, but the presence of a white floor allows for shadow visibility. Participants debate the nature of shadows, emphasizing that shadows do not cancel each other out, and the overall illumination in shadows is always less than in light. The conversation highlights the complexity of light and shadow interactions in this thought experiment.
PaulMuaddid
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You are in a dark room with no other sources of light
The walls are painted black, so no light is scattered from walls

You have two point sources of light of equal power + same height about ground
They are 10 feet apart

You stand a thick rod vertically in middle of two, and 4 feet in front of the point sources

What kind of shadow will be cast?

1) one shadow from one lamp?
2) two shadows from both lamps?
3) only intersection shadow from both lamps?
4) other?

Explain your answer!
:smile:
 
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depending on how bright the lights are, you'd see two shadows. If they were reaaaally bright, there'd be no shadows, but if they weren't so bright you'd see two shadows. Each shadow would be not as dim as would be if the other light weren't on.

I'm basing this on personal experience of remembering shadows on auditorium stages with multiple lights. Usually the object would cast as many shadows as there were lights above it, but the lights that were further away (or dimmer) would cast shadows that weren't as "strong" as the shadows cast by the lights that were closer (or brighter).
 
Almost...
:smile:

With answer comes another question, but there are more than 2 shadows.
 
No. Whether Paul Muadid intended it or not, it's a trick question.

No shadows are cast.

"...no light is scattered from walls."

:)
 
No light is scattered from walls, but the two point sources of light are generating light.

(in other words, the walls do not enter equation)
 
PaulMuaddid said:
No light is scattered from walls, but the two point sources of light are generating light.

(in other words, the walls do not enter equation)
So, where do these shadows of which you speak get cast? :) But OK, let's grant the walls don't play in.

You get 4 shadows.

Each source casts a shadow of the rod and the other light source.
 
PaulMuaddid said:
No light is scattered from walls, but the two point sources of light are generating light.

(in other words, the walls do not enter equation)

if no light is scattered from the walls, then how do you see the walls? And therefore how do you tell the difference between wall and shadow?
 
There is a floor, the shadow (whatever shadow that would be) would be cast on the floor.
 
PaulMuaddid said:
There is a floor, the shadow (whatever shadow that would be) would be cast on the floor.

You didn't say that there was a floor, or what color it was painted. All relevant information should be given in the problem statement, otherwise it's not a properly posed problem.

Should we ask about the ceiling? :devil:
 
  • #10
There's a ceiling, it too is black and non-reflective.
Floor is white and can receive cast shadows.
 
  • #11
Perhaps the OP simply wishes to say "the walls reflect little enough light that any secondary reflections can be ignored".
 
  • #12
A "shadow" counts as a separate shadow if it is from a different source OR if its gradient is different.
We're only interested in shadows cast onto floor.
There are three.

Shadow.jpg


I'm still not sure why shadow 2 and 3 are not completely canceled out.
Shadow #2 is closer to left light source, so the left light source should completely cancel out the #2 shadow.
The same for #3.

Does it depend on how bright the light is?
Shadow #1 (the intersection of both shadows) is darker than #2 and #3
 
  • #13
PaulMuaddid said:
A "shadow" counts as a separate shadow if it is from a different source OR if its gradient is different.
We're only interested in shadows cast onto floor.
There are three.
Where did you get this statement from? Source please.
PaulMuaddid said:
Shadow.jpg


I'm still not sure why shadow 2 and 3 are not completely canceled out.
Because shadows don't "cancel out". If you stood at a point in one of those shadows and took a light meter reading, how much light do you think you'd measure? Would it be less than you'd measure out in full light of both sources? Yes? Then you're in the shadow of at least one light regardless of how many other lights are shining on you..

One light source, one shadow. Two light sources, two shadows. The darker area is simply the intersection of the two shadows. It is not a third shadow.BTW, the lights themselves will cast shadows of each other. Do you choose to ignore this?
 
  • #14
The words Umbra and Penumbra come to mind.
The problem isn't presented in an unambiguous way so it's hard to be sure what they're after.
I don't know how any shadow can "cancel out" another. The sum of the illumination 'outside' any shadow must be greater than the illumination within a shadow.
 
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