Exploration 34.3: Toward Building a Lens

index of refraction =     

Please wait for the animation to completely load.

Light rays from a beam source, initially in air, are incident on a material of different index of refraction (position is given in meters).  You can change the curvature of the surface of the material as well as the index of refraction.  Restart.

  1. Move the slider to decrease the curvature of the blue material.  What happens when the edge is curved more (the radius gets smaller)?  When the curvature is 1, where is the point at which all the rays converge (a focal point)?
  2. Increase the index of refraction.  When the curvature is 1, where is the point at which all the rays converge?  If the index of refraction is 1, what happens?  Why?
  3. Mathematically, the relationship between this focal point inside the curved material, the curvature of the surface, and the radius of curvature of the surface is given by f = nR/(n - 1).  Verify this expression with the animation.

How a surface focuses light, then, depends both on the index of refraction as well as on the curvature of the material.

 

 

Exploration authored by Anne J. Cox.
© 2004 by Prentice-Hall, Inc. A Pearson Company