Velocity of red light vs. blue light in water - qualitative reasoning?

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SUMMARY

In the discussion regarding the velocity of red light versus blue light in water, participants concluded that red light travels faster than blue light due to differences in refractive indices and dispersion effects. The group velocity, defined as dw/dk, is always less than the speed of light in a vacuum (c), and the slope of the dispersion relationship indicates that lower wavelengths (blue light) experience greater slowing. The conversation highlighted the importance of understanding both phase velocity (w/k) and group velocity, emphasizing that while phase velocity can exceed c, it does not equate to the velocity of energy propagation. Key references included A. Sommerfeld's "Lectures on Theoretical Physics, Vol. IV (Optics)" for deeper insights into dispersion theory.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of refractive indices and their impact on light propagation.
  • Familiarity with the concepts of phase velocity and group velocity in wave mechanics.
  • Knowledge of dispersion relationships in electromagnetic waves.
  • Basic principles of optics and light behavior in different media.
NEXT STEPS
  • Study the dispersion relationship of electromagnetic waves in various media.
  • Learn about the mathematical derivation of group velocity and phase velocity.
  • Examine A. Sommerfeld's "Lectures on Theoretical Physics, Vol. IV (Optics)" for advanced optical concepts.
  • Research Huygens' principle and its application in understanding light propagation in dispersive media.
USEFUL FOR

Physicists, optical engineers, and students studying wave mechanics and optics will benefit from this discussion, particularly those interested in the behavior of light in different media and the principles of dispersion.

vvarma
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Every source I have referred to says red light is faster in water than blue light. However, nearly all descriptions/explanations depend on refractive indices and 'bending' to show that blue light is slowed to a greater extent. Instead, I'm wondering if a more precise explanation based on dispersion is possible b/c every time I attempt to reason out this fact based on group velocities, I get the opposite conclusion.

My reasoning: Water is a dispersive material so frequency w is non-linear wrt wave number k. Group velocity is dw/dk and always less than c [sanity check] but the slope of the graph increases with k so group velocity is higher at lower wavelengths [k inversely proportional to lambda] which seems to imply that wave packets of lower wavelength should have a faster speed in water...

Am I using the dispersion relationship of w-k wrongly or is the group velocity not the same as the velocity of propagation [I'm fairly confident it is since number sources cite it as the speed that energy/information of the wave travel]?

Should I use phase velocity w/k instead? I have strong doubts given a) it always exceeds c and b) that dispersive wave means that w/k not equal to dw/dk = v. However, if I do use it, I get the correct connection of greater phase velocity for great wavelength.

I have a feeling that though I understand the terms and concepts to some degree, I can't draw the connection I want to b/c I'm lacking some other tool. Can you even draw the conclusion that vred > vblue in water knowing only w-k relationship?
 
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The classical dispersion theory of em. waves in media is enough to understand the principle properties of light in media. A very good source about this is

A. Sommerfeld, Lectures on Theoretical Physics, Vol. IV (Optics)

There also wave propagation in the case of anomalous dispersion, where the phase velocity is greater than the in vacuo speed of light, is thoroughly discussed in a very elegant manner.
 
The ratio of omega to k is the phase velocity.

Just remember that phase and group velocities have inverse relationship relative to c. Thus your reasoning when applied to phase velocity -- -red has lower phase velocity-- reverses to --red has higher group velocity--.
 
@vanhees71 I'll definitely check out that source. Thank you.

@jambaugh Thanks for the reciprocal argument. It seems possible to me that I might be using the wrong w-k relationship to show this result due to a mislabeling on the part of my professor. Just to verify: is the graph of w(k) for water [and transparent materials in general] at all similar to w2=wp2+c2k2 because this is what my [incorrect] analysis is based on. If so, do you potentially have the correct w(k) from which to draw the wanted results?
 
when monochromatic light as in red and blue light go through water their frequency remains constant so,the velocity depends on wavelength only .since blue light has smaller wavelength than red its velocity is also less than that of reds.
 
tdev said:
when monochromatic light as in red and blue light go through water their frequency remains constant so,the velocity depends on wavelength only .since blue light has smaller wavelength than red its velocity is also less than that of reds.

Please try not to reply to 2 1/2 year old threads. :biggrin:
 
Drakkith said:
Please try not to reply to 2 1/2 year old threads. :biggrin:
lol,i didnt see the date tanx for telling.
 
From the mathpages reference on group.phase and signal velocity :
The refractive index is a function of frequency, like permittivity, resulting in the dispersion of colors seen in a prism
dω/dk = c/n - ck/n2 dn/dk
Hence any modulation of an electromagnetic wave in this medium will propagate at the group velocity: Vg = Vp [1 - k/n dn/dk] Since n increases with the wave number k and therefore frequency - this is why the blue component of white light is refracted more than red.
From Huygens' Construction for the refractive index : sin∅1/sin∅212 = v1/v2 . In the geometric optics diagram
Huygen shows the the wavelength and velocity from air to a material medium decreases : λ21v2/v1
Can these two explanations for the refractive index , (dispersion + group velocity ) and Huygens
geometric optics that show the wavelength and therefore velocity in the medium decreased, be unified with a common mechanism ?

Oh sorrey just noticed date !
 
Last edited:

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