Why Does the Speed of Light Change in Different Mediums?

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quantizedzeus
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Speed of light...

It makes no sense to me that if the speed of light is always c...then in different mediums why this speed changes...?? I may have got it in a wrong way...But can anyone help me out in detail...(thanks)
 
on Phys.org


The speed of light is constant in vacuum and it changes in different mediums.
when light enters a denser medium (like from air to glass) the speed and wavelength of the
light wave decrease while the frequency stays the same.
How much light slows down depends on the new medium's refractive index, n.
 


speed of light (c = 3 x 10^8) is an constant while on vacuum
but c vary in other medium depend on its density. => n = c/v while n = refractive index.
higher refractive index means less density.
CMIIW
 


quantizedzeus said:
It makes no sense to me that if the speed of light is always c...then in different mediums why this speed changes...?? I may have got it in a wrong way...But can anyone help me out in detail...(thanks)

Seems perfectly natural to me. But don't just say the speed changes. It only gets slower in a medium.

But the fact is that light is constantly absorbed and re-emitted in a medium. The light that goes out isn't the light that came in.

When a light-particle bangs into the electron cloud in an atom in a medium, it dies and is disappeared, and an impostor steals its clothes and runs out the same direction a bit later. Everyone is fooled. Even the cops.
 


danR said:
Seems perfectly natural to me. But don't just say the speed changes. It only gets slower in a medium.

But the fact is that light is constantly absorbed and re-emitted in a medium. The light that goes out isn't the light that came in.

When a light-particle bangs into the electron cloud in an atom in a medium, it dies and is disappeared, and an impostor steals its clothes and runs out the same direction a bit later. Everyone is fooled. Even the cops.

Speed of light is slower in all mediums except VACUUM.
v=frequency x wavelength

v changes but wavelength doesn't.

as v changes this causes refraction when light enters a different medium.
 


Keyur said:
Speed of light is slower in all mediums except VACUUM.
v=frequency x wavelength

v changes but wavelength doesn't.

as v changes this causes refraction when light enters a different medium.

I wouldn't include a vacuum as a medium, though. And strictly speaking, does c remain as a constant even with a medium, between re-emissions and re-absorptions?
 


After reading the FAQ on transmission through a medium, I have to abandon the simple adsorbtion, re-emission model, although the wording at a key point in that article is a bit confusing.
 


danR said:
Seems perfectly natural to me. But don't just say the speed changes. It only gets slower in a medium.

But the fact is that light is constantly absorbed and re-emitted in a medium. The light that goes out isn't the light that came in.

When a light-particle bangs into the electron cloud in an atom in a medium, it dies and is disappeared, and an impostor steals its clothes and runs out the same direction a bit later. Everyone is fooled. Even the cops.

so the light particle that come in will stay there ?? or what ?
 


If the light bulb is in the midle of the room and you turn it on the light reaches south wall same time as north wall. Does that mean you multiply the speed of light times 2?
 


piroman said:
If the light bulb is in the midle of the room and you turn it on the light reaches south wall same time as north wall. Does that mean you multiply the speed of light times 2?

You need to read up on what light is. Hit up wikipedia and the FAQ here on PF.