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Wave Interactions. Can you see me now?. Transparent materials allow waves to pass through them with little or no distortion Translucent materials allow waves to pass through them with varying degrees of distortion Opaque materials do not allow waves to pass through them
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Can you see me now? • Transparent materials allow waves to pass through them with little or no distortion • Translucent materials allow waves to pass through them with varying degrees of distortion • Opaque materials do not allow waves to pass through them • Waves must be reflected or absorbed
Categories • Reflection • Refraction • Diffraction • Absorption • Interference • Constructive Interference • Destructive Interference
Reflection • Reflection is when a wave bounces off of a surface • Some of the energy may be absorbed, but most is reflected • LAW OF REFLECTION • The angle of incidence MUST EQUAL the angle of reflection
Mirror, mirror • Explains why a mirror must be smooth • So that all the angles line up to make a clear picture in the reflection • Water surfaces may not be smooth, produce a distorted reflection
Mirror, etc. Chalkboard, etc.
Shaped Mirrors • Concave • “caved in” • Light rays, etc., converge in the center • Make the image larger or focus energy • Parabolic dishes • Satellite dishes • Lighting the Olympic Torch
Shaped Mirrors • Convex • “curved out” • Light rays, etc., spread out from the center • Images look smaller, but cover more area
Refraction • Refraction is when a wave bends as it moves from one medium to another • “Edges” of the wave “slow down” in a more dense medium and “speed up” in a less dense medium • The wave front bends towards the normal in a more dense medium, and • away from the normal in a less dense medium
Oil-slick Rainbows • Because of the different densities of oil, gasoline, water, and air, a rainbow-like refraction can form in puddles near well-traveled parking lots
Lenses • Controlling the “bend” of the light allows us to make lenses
Diffraction • Bending of waves around a barrier
Jetties are false walls to bend the ocean waves towards the shore
Interference • Whenever two waves of the same kind pass through each other, they interfere • Constructive Interference • If their crests and troughs line up, they are said to be “in phase” • Destructive Interference • If these points don’t, they are “out of phase” • Should they be exactly “out of phase”, the waves will cancel each other out