Optics For Dummies (eBook, PDF)
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The easy way to shed light on Optics In general terms, optics is the science of light. More specifically, optics is a branch of physics that describes the behavior and properties of light?including visible, infrared, and ultraviolet?and the interaction of light with matter. Optics For Dummies gives you an approachable introduction to optical science, methods, and applications. You'll get plain-English explanations of the nature of light and optical effects; reflection, refraction, and diffraction; color dispersion; optical devices, industrial, medical, and military applications; as well as…mehr
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- Produktdetails
- Verlag: John Wiley & Sons
- Seitenzahl: 368
- Erscheinungstermin: 22. Juli 2011
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781118024379
- Artikelnr.: 38240376
- Verlag: John Wiley & Sons
- Seitenzahl: 368
- Erscheinungstermin: 22. Juli 2011
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781118024379
- Artikelnr.: 38240376
About This Book 1
Conventions Used in This Book 2
What You're Not to Read 3
Foolish Assumptions 3
How This Book Is Organized 3
Part I: Getting Up to Speed on Optics Fundamentals 4
Part II: Geometrical Optics: Working with More Than One Ray 4
Part III: Physical Optics: Using the Light Wave 4
Part IV: Optical Instrumentation: Putting Light to Practical Use 4
Part V: Hybrids: Exploring More Complicated Optical Systems 5
Part VI: More Than Just Images: Getting into Advanced Optics 5
Part VII: The Part of Tens 5
Icons Used in This Book 5
Where to Go from Here 6
Part I: Getting Up to Speed on Optics Fundamentals 7
Chapter 1: Introducing Optics, the Science of Light 9
Illuminating the Properties of Light 9
Creating images with the particle property of light 10
Harnessing interference and diffraction with the wave property of light 10
Using Optics to Your Advantage: Basic Applications 11
Expanding Your Understanding of Optics 12
Considering complicated applications 12
Adding advanced optics 13
Paving the Way: Contributions to Optics 13
Chapter 2: Brushing Up on Optics-Related Math and Physics 15
Working with Physical Measurements 15
Refreshing Your Mathematics Memory 16
Juggling variables with algebra 16
Finding lengths and angles with trigonometry 18
Exploring the unknown with basic matrix algebra 21
Reviewing Wave Physics 26
The wave function: Understanding its features and variables 26
Medium matters: Working with mechanical waves 28
Using wavefronts in optics 29
Chapter 3: A Little Light Study: Reviewing Light Basics 31
Developing Early Ideas about the Nature of Light 31
Pondering the particle theory of light 32
Walking through the wave theory of light 32
Taking a Closer Look at Light Waves 33
If light is a wave, what's waving? Understanding electromagnetic radiation
33
Dealing with wavelengths and frequency: The electromagnetic spectrum 36
Calculating the intensity and power of light 36
Einstein's Revolutionary Idea about Light: Quanta 37
Uncovering the photoelectric effect and the problem with light waves 38
Merging wave and particle properties: The photon 39
Let There Be Light: Understanding the Three Processes that Produce Light 40
Atomic transitions 40
Accelerated charged particles 41
Matter-antimatter annihilation 42
Introducing the Three Fields of Study within Optics 42
Geometrical optics: Studying light as a collection of rays 42
Physical optics: Exploring the wave property of light 43
Quantum optics: Investigating small numbers of photons 43
Chapter 4: Understanding How to Direct Where Light Goes 45
Reflection: Bouncing Light Off Surfaces 45
Determining light's orientation 46
Understanding the role surface plays in specular and diffuse reflection 47
Appreciating the practical difference between reflection and scattering 48
Refraction: Bending Light as It Goes Through a Surface 50
Making light slow down: Determining the index of refraction 50
Calculating how much the refracted ray bends: Snell's law 51
Bouncing light back with refraction: Total internal reflection 52
Varying the refractive index with dispersion 53
Birefringence: Working with two indices of refraction for the same
wavelength 54
Diffraction: Bending Light around an Obstacle 55
Part II: Geometrical Optics: Working with More Than One Ray 57
Chapter 5: Forming Images with Multiple Rays of Light 59
The Simplest Method: Using Shadows to Create Images 60
Forming Images Without a Lens: The Pinhole Camera Principle 62
Eyeing Basic Image Characteristics for Optical System Design 63
The type of image created: Real or virtual 63
The orientation of the image relative to the object 63
The size of the image relative to the object 64
Zeroing In on the Focal Point and Focal Length 65
Determining the focal point and length 65
Differentiating real and virtual focal points 66
Chapter 6: Imaging with Mirrors: Bouncing Many Rays Around 69
Keeping it Simple with Flat Mirrors 69
Changing Shape with Concave and Convex Mirrors 70
Getting a handle on the mirror equation and sign conventions 71
Working with concave mirrors 72
Exploring convex mirrors 74
Chapter 7: Imaging with Refraction: Bending Many Rays at the Same Time 77
Locating the Image Produced by a Refracting Surface 78
Calculating where an image will appear 78
Solving single-surface imaging problems 80
Working with more than one refracting surface 83
Looking at Lenses: Two Refracting Surfaces Stuck Close Together 85
Designing a lens: The lens maker's formula 85
Taking a closer look at convex and concave lenses 88
Finding the image location and characteristics for multiple lenses 89
D'oh, fuzzy again! Aberrations 91
Part III: Physical Optics: Using the Light Wave 95
Chapter 8: Optical Polarization: Describing the Wiggling Electric Field in
Light 97
Describing Optical Polarization 97
Focusing on the electric field's alignment 98
Polarization: Looking at the plane of the electric field 99
Examining the Different Types of Polarization 100
Linear, circular, or elliptical: Following the vector path 100
Random or unpolarized: Looking at changing or mixed states 107
Producing Polarized Light 108
Selective absorption: No passing unless you get in line 108
Scattering off small particles 109
Reflection: Aligning parallel to the surface 110
Birefringence: Splitting in two 111
Chapter 9: Changing Optical Polarization 113
Discovering Devices that Can Change Optical Polarization 113
Dichroic filters: Changing the axis with linear polarizers 114
Birefringent materials: Changing or rotating the polarization state 117
Rotating light with optically active materials 121
Jones Vectors: Calculating the Change in Polarization 121
Representing the polarization state with Jones vectors 121
Jones matrices: Showing how devices will change polarization 124
Matrix multiplication: Predicting how devices will affect incident light
126
Chapter 10: Calculating Reflected and Transmitted Light with Fresnel
Equations 131
Determining the Amount of Reflected and Transmitted Light 131
Transverse modes: Describing the orientation of the fields 132
Defining the reflection and transmission coefficients 133
Using more powerful values: Reflectance and transmittance 134
The Fresnel equations: Finding how much incident light is reflected or
transmitted 135
Surveying Special Situations Involving Reflection and the Fresnel Equations
136
Striking at Brewster's angle 137
Reflectance at normal incidence: Coming in at 0 degrees 137
Reflectance at glancing incidence: Striking at 90 degrees 138
Exploring internal reflection and total internal reflection 138
Frustrated total internal reflection: Dealing with the evanescent wave 139
Chapter 11: Running Optical Interference: Not Always a Bad Thing 143
Describing Optical Interference 143
On the fringe: Looking at constructive and destructive interference 144
Noting the conditions required to see optical interference 145
Perusing Practical Interference Devices: Interferometers 146
Wavefront-splitting interferometers 146
Amplitude-splitting interferometers 151
Accounting for Other Amplitude-Splitting Arrangements 154
Thin film interference 154
Newton's rings 157
Fabry-Perot interferometer 158
Chapter 12: Diffraction: Light's Bending around Obstacles 161
From Near and Far: Understanding Two Types of Diffraction 162
Defining the types of diffraction 162
Determining which type of diffraction you see 163
Going the Distance: Special Cases of Fraunhofer Diffraction 164
Fraunhofer diffraction from a circular aperture 165
Fraunhofer diffraction from slits 167
Getting Close: Special Cases of Fresnel Diffraction 172
Fresnel diffraction from a rectangular aperture 173
Fresnel diffraction from a circular aperture 174
Fresnel diffraction from a solid disk 175
Diffraction from Fresnel zone plates 175
Part IV: Optical Instrumentation: Putting Light to Practical Use 179
Chapter 13: Lens Systems: Looking at Things the Way You Want to See Them
181
Your Most Important Optical System: The Human Eye 181
Understanding the structure of the human eye 182
Accommodation: Flexing some muscles to change the focus 183
Using Lens Systems to Correct Vision Problems 185
Corrective lenses: Looking at lens shape and optical power 185
Correcting nearsightedness, farsightedness, and astigmatism 186
Enhancing the Human Eye with Lens Systems 190
Magnifying glasses: Enlarging images with the simple magnifier 191
Seeing small objects with the compound microscope 192
Going the distance with the simple telescope 194
Jumping to the big screen: The optical projector 195
Chapter 14: Exploring Light Sources: Getting Light Where You Want It 197
Shedding Light on Common Household Bulbs 198
Popular bulb types and how they work 198
Reading electrical bulb rates 201
Shining More-Efficient Light on the Subject: Light Emitting Diodes 201
Looking inside an LED 202
Adding color with organic light emitting diodes 203
LEDs on display: Improving your picture with semiconductor laser diodes 204
Zeroing in on Lasers 205
Building a basic laser system 206
Comparing lasers to light bulbs 211
Chapter 15: Guiding Light From Here to Anywhere 213
Getting Light in the Guide and Keeping it There: Total Internal Reflection
213
Navigating numerical aperture: How much light can you put in? 214
Examining light guide modes 215
Categorizing Light Guide Types 216
Fiber-optic cables 216
Slab waveguides 220
Putting Light Guides to Work: Common Applications 221
Light pipes 221
Telecommunication links 221
Imaging bundles 224
Part V: Hybrids: Exploring More Complicated Optical Systems 227
Chapter 16: Photography: Keeping an Image Forever 229
Getting an Optical Snapshot of the Basic Camera 230
Lens: Determining what you see 231
Aperture: Working with f-number and lens speed 234
Shutter: Letting just enough light through 236
Recording media: Saving images forever 236
Holography: Seeing Depth in a Flat Surface 237
Seeing in three dimensions 237
Exploring two types of holograms 238
Relating the hologram and the diffraction grating 240
Graduating to 3-D Movies: Depth that Moves! 243
Circular polarization 243
Six-color anaglyph system 244
Shutter glasses 244
Chapter 17: Medical Imaging: Seeing What's Inside You (No Knives
Necessary!) 247
Shining Light into You and Seeing What Comes Out 247
X-rays 248
Optical coherence tomography 250
Endoscopes 251
Reading the Light that Comes Out of You 253
CAT scans 254
PET scans 255
NMR scans 256
MRI scans 257
Chapter 18: Optics Everywhere: Exploring Other Medical, Industrial, and
Military Uses 259
Considering Typical Medical Procedures Involving Lasers 259
Removing stuff you don't want: Tissue ablation 260
Sealing up holes or incisions 263
Purely cosmetic: Doing away with tattoos, varicose veins, and unwanted hair
264
Getting Industrial: Making and Checking Products Out with Optics 265
Monitoring quality control 265
Drilling holes or etching materials 265
Making life easier: Commercial applications 266
Applying Optics in Military and Law Enforcement Endeavors 267
Range finders 267
Target designation 268
Missile defense 268
Night vision systems 269
Thermal vision systems 270
Image processing 270
Chapter 19: Astronomical Applications: Using Telescopes 271
Understanding the Anatomy of a Telescope 272
Gathering the light 272
Viewing the image with an eyepiece 273
Revolutionizing Refracting Telescopes 274
Galilean telescope 275
Kepler's enhancement 276
Reimagining Telescope Design: Reflecting Telescopes 277
Newtonian 277
Cassegrain 278
Gregorian 279
Hybrid Telescopes: Lenses and Mirrors Working Together 280
Schmidt 280
Maksutov 281
Invisible Astronomy: Looking Beyond the Visible 282
When One Telescope Just Won't Do: The Interferometer 283
Part VI: More Than Just Images: Getting into Advanced Optics 285
Chapter 20: Index of Refraction, Part 2: You Can Change It! 287
Electro-Optics: Manipulating the Index of Refraction with Electric Fields
287
Dielectric polarization: Understanding the source of the electro-optic
effect 288
Linear and quadratic: Looking at the types of electro-optic effects 289
Examining electro-optic devices 293
Acousto-Optics: Changing a Crystal's Density with Sound 295
The acousto-optic effect: Making a variable diffraction grating 295
Using acousto-optic devices 296
Frequency Conversion: Affecting Light Frequency with Light 297
Second harmonic generation: Doubling the frequency 297
Parametric amplification: Converting a pump beam into a signal beam 298
Sum and difference frequency mixing: Creating long or short wavelengths 299
Chapter 21: Quantum Optics: Finding the Photon 301
Weaving Together Wave and Particle Properties 301
Seeing wave and particle properties of light 302
Looking at wave and particle properties of matter 304
Experimental Evidence: Observing the Dual Nature of Light and Matter 306
Young's two-slit experiment, revisited 306
Diffraction of light and matter 307
The Mach-Zehnder interferometer 308
Quantum Entanglement: Looking at Linked Photons 308
Spooky action: Observing interacting photons 308
Encryption and computers: Developing technology with linked photons 309
Part VII: The Part of Tens 311
Chapter 22: Ten Experiments You Can Do Without a $1-Million Optics Lab 313
Chromatic Dispersion with Water Spray 313
The Simple Magnifier 314
Microscope with a Marble 314
Focal Length of a Positive Lens with a Magnifying Glass 314
Telescope with Magnifying Glasses 315
Thin Film Interference by Blowing Bubbles 316
Polarized Sunglasses and the Sky 316
Mirages on a Clear Day 317
Spherical Aberration with a Magnifying Glass 317
Chromatic Aberration with a Magnifying Glass 318
Chapter 23: Ten Major Optics Discoveries - and the People Who Made them
Possible 319
The Telescope (1610) 319
Optical Physics (Late 1600s) 320
Diffraction and the Wave Theory of Light (Late 1600s) 320
Two-Slit Experiment (Early 1800s) 321
Polarization (Early 1800s) 321
Rayleigh Scattering (Late 1800s) 321
Electromagnetics (1861) 322
Electro-Optics (1875 and 1893) 322
Photon Theory of Light (1905) 322
The Maser (1953) and The Laser (1960) 323
Index 325
About This Book 1
Conventions Used in This Book 2
What You're Not to Read 3
Foolish Assumptions 3
How This Book Is Organized 3
Part I: Getting Up to Speed on Optics Fundamentals 4
Part II: Geometrical Optics: Working with More Than One Ray 4
Part III: Physical Optics: Using the Light Wave 4
Part IV: Optical Instrumentation: Putting Light to Practical Use 4
Part V: Hybrids: Exploring More Complicated Optical Systems 5
Part VI: More Than Just Images: Getting into Advanced Optics 5
Part VII: The Part of Tens 5
Icons Used in This Book 5
Where to Go from Here 6
Part I: Getting Up to Speed on Optics Fundamentals 7
Chapter 1: Introducing Optics, the Science of Light 9
Illuminating the Properties of Light 9
Creating images with the particle property of light 10
Harnessing interference and diffraction with the wave property of light 10
Using Optics to Your Advantage: Basic Applications 11
Expanding Your Understanding of Optics 12
Considering complicated applications 12
Adding advanced optics 13
Paving the Way: Contributions to Optics 13
Chapter 2: Brushing Up on Optics-Related Math and Physics 15
Working with Physical Measurements 15
Refreshing Your Mathematics Memory 16
Juggling variables with algebra 16
Finding lengths and angles with trigonometry 18
Exploring the unknown with basic matrix algebra 21
Reviewing Wave Physics 26
The wave function: Understanding its features and variables 26
Medium matters: Working with mechanical waves 28
Using wavefronts in optics 29
Chapter 3: A Little Light Study: Reviewing Light Basics 31
Developing Early Ideas about the Nature of Light 31
Pondering the particle theory of light 32
Walking through the wave theory of light 32
Taking a Closer Look at Light Waves 33
If light is a wave, what's waving? Understanding electromagnetic radiation
33
Dealing with wavelengths and frequency: The electromagnetic spectrum 36
Calculating the intensity and power of light 36
Einstein's Revolutionary Idea about Light: Quanta 37
Uncovering the photoelectric effect and the problem with light waves 38
Merging wave and particle properties: The photon 39
Let There Be Light: Understanding the Three Processes that Produce Light 40
Atomic transitions 40
Accelerated charged particles 41
Matter-antimatter annihilation 42
Introducing the Three Fields of Study within Optics 42
Geometrical optics: Studying light as a collection of rays 42
Physical optics: Exploring the wave property of light 43
Quantum optics: Investigating small numbers of photons 43
Chapter 4: Understanding How to Direct Where Light Goes 45
Reflection: Bouncing Light Off Surfaces 45
Determining light's orientation 46
Understanding the role surface plays in specular and diffuse reflection 47
Appreciating the practical difference between reflection and scattering 48
Refraction: Bending Light as It Goes Through a Surface 50
Making light slow down: Determining the index of refraction 50
Calculating how much the refracted ray bends: Snell's law 51
Bouncing light back with refraction: Total internal reflection 52
Varying the refractive index with dispersion 53
Birefringence: Working with two indices of refraction for the same
wavelength 54
Diffraction: Bending Light around an Obstacle 55
Part II: Geometrical Optics: Working with More Than One Ray 57
Chapter 5: Forming Images with Multiple Rays of Light 59
The Simplest Method: Using Shadows to Create Images 60
Forming Images Without a Lens: The Pinhole Camera Principle 62
Eyeing Basic Image Characteristics for Optical System Design 63
The type of image created: Real or virtual 63
The orientation of the image relative to the object 63
The size of the image relative to the object 64
Zeroing In on the Focal Point and Focal Length 65
Determining the focal point and length 65
Differentiating real and virtual focal points 66
Chapter 6: Imaging with Mirrors: Bouncing Many Rays Around 69
Keeping it Simple with Flat Mirrors 69
Changing Shape with Concave and Convex Mirrors 70
Getting a handle on the mirror equation and sign conventions 71
Working with concave mirrors 72
Exploring convex mirrors 74
Chapter 7: Imaging with Refraction: Bending Many Rays at the Same Time 77
Locating the Image Produced by a Refracting Surface 78
Calculating where an image will appear 78
Solving single-surface imaging problems 80
Working with more than one refracting surface 83
Looking at Lenses: Two Refracting Surfaces Stuck Close Together 85
Designing a lens: The lens maker's formula 85
Taking a closer look at convex and concave lenses 88
Finding the image location and characteristics for multiple lenses 89
D'oh, fuzzy again! Aberrations 91
Part III: Physical Optics: Using the Light Wave 95
Chapter 8: Optical Polarization: Describing the Wiggling Electric Field in
Light 97
Describing Optical Polarization 97
Focusing on the electric field's alignment 98
Polarization: Looking at the plane of the electric field 99
Examining the Different Types of Polarization 100
Linear, circular, or elliptical: Following the vector path 100
Random or unpolarized: Looking at changing or mixed states 107
Producing Polarized Light 108
Selective absorption: No passing unless you get in line 108
Scattering off small particles 109
Reflection: Aligning parallel to the surface 110
Birefringence: Splitting in two 111
Chapter 9: Changing Optical Polarization 113
Discovering Devices that Can Change Optical Polarization 113
Dichroic filters: Changing the axis with linear polarizers 114
Birefringent materials: Changing or rotating the polarization state 117
Rotating light with optically active materials 121
Jones Vectors: Calculating the Change in Polarization 121
Representing the polarization state with Jones vectors 121
Jones matrices: Showing how devices will change polarization 124
Matrix multiplication: Predicting how devices will affect incident light
126
Chapter 10: Calculating Reflected and Transmitted Light with Fresnel
Equations 131
Determining the Amount of Reflected and Transmitted Light 131
Transverse modes: Describing the orientation of the fields 132
Defining the reflection and transmission coefficients 133
Using more powerful values: Reflectance and transmittance 134
The Fresnel equations: Finding how much incident light is reflected or
transmitted 135
Surveying Special Situations Involving Reflection and the Fresnel Equations
136
Striking at Brewster's angle 137
Reflectance at normal incidence: Coming in at 0 degrees 137
Reflectance at glancing incidence: Striking at 90 degrees 138
Exploring internal reflection and total internal reflection 138
Frustrated total internal reflection: Dealing with the evanescent wave 139
Chapter 11: Running Optical Interference: Not Always a Bad Thing 143
Describing Optical Interference 143
On the fringe: Looking at constructive and destructive interference 144
Noting the conditions required to see optical interference 145
Perusing Practical Interference Devices: Interferometers 146
Wavefront-splitting interferometers 146
Amplitude-splitting interferometers 151
Accounting for Other Amplitude-Splitting Arrangements 154
Thin film interference 154
Newton's rings 157
Fabry-Perot interferometer 158
Chapter 12: Diffraction: Light's Bending around Obstacles 161
From Near and Far: Understanding Two Types of Diffraction 162
Defining the types of diffraction 162
Determining which type of diffraction you see 163
Going the Distance: Special Cases of Fraunhofer Diffraction 164
Fraunhofer diffraction from a circular aperture 165
Fraunhofer diffraction from slits 167
Getting Close: Special Cases of Fresnel Diffraction 172
Fresnel diffraction from a rectangular aperture 173
Fresnel diffraction from a circular aperture 174
Fresnel diffraction from a solid disk 175
Diffraction from Fresnel zone plates 175
Part IV: Optical Instrumentation: Putting Light to Practical Use 179
Chapter 13: Lens Systems: Looking at Things the Way You Want to See Them
181
Your Most Important Optical System: The Human Eye 181
Understanding the structure of the human eye 182
Accommodation: Flexing some muscles to change the focus 183
Using Lens Systems to Correct Vision Problems 185
Corrective lenses: Looking at lens shape and optical power 185
Correcting nearsightedness, farsightedness, and astigmatism 186
Enhancing the Human Eye with Lens Systems 190
Magnifying glasses: Enlarging images with the simple magnifier 191
Seeing small objects with the compound microscope 192
Going the distance with the simple telescope 194
Jumping to the big screen: The optical projector 195
Chapter 14: Exploring Light Sources: Getting Light Where You Want It 197
Shedding Light on Common Household Bulbs 198
Popular bulb types and how they work 198
Reading electrical bulb rates 201
Shining More-Efficient Light on the Subject: Light Emitting Diodes 201
Looking inside an LED 202
Adding color with organic light emitting diodes 203
LEDs on display: Improving your picture with semiconductor laser diodes 204
Zeroing in on Lasers 205
Building a basic laser system 206
Comparing lasers to light bulbs 211
Chapter 15: Guiding Light From Here to Anywhere 213
Getting Light in the Guide and Keeping it There: Total Internal Reflection
213
Navigating numerical aperture: How much light can you put in? 214
Examining light guide modes 215
Categorizing Light Guide Types 216
Fiber-optic cables 216
Slab waveguides 220
Putting Light Guides to Work: Common Applications 221
Light pipes 221
Telecommunication links 221
Imaging bundles 224
Part V: Hybrids: Exploring More Complicated Optical Systems 227
Chapter 16: Photography: Keeping an Image Forever 229
Getting an Optical Snapshot of the Basic Camera 230
Lens: Determining what you see 231
Aperture: Working with f-number and lens speed 234
Shutter: Letting just enough light through 236
Recording media: Saving images forever 236
Holography: Seeing Depth in a Flat Surface 237
Seeing in three dimensions 237
Exploring two types of holograms 238
Relating the hologram and the diffraction grating 240
Graduating to 3-D Movies: Depth that Moves! 243
Circular polarization 243
Six-color anaglyph system 244
Shutter glasses 244
Chapter 17: Medical Imaging: Seeing What's Inside You (No Knives
Necessary!) 247
Shining Light into You and Seeing What Comes Out 247
X-rays 248
Optical coherence tomography 250
Endoscopes 251
Reading the Light that Comes Out of You 253
CAT scans 254
PET scans 255
NMR scans 256
MRI scans 257
Chapter 18: Optics Everywhere: Exploring Other Medical, Industrial, and
Military Uses 259
Considering Typical Medical Procedures Involving Lasers 259
Removing stuff you don't want: Tissue ablation 260
Sealing up holes or incisions 263
Purely cosmetic: Doing away with tattoos, varicose veins, and unwanted hair
264
Getting Industrial: Making and Checking Products Out with Optics 265
Monitoring quality control 265
Drilling holes or etching materials 265
Making life easier: Commercial applications 266
Applying Optics in Military and Law Enforcement Endeavors 267
Range finders 267
Target designation 268
Missile defense 268
Night vision systems 269
Thermal vision systems 270
Image processing 270
Chapter 19: Astronomical Applications: Using Telescopes 271
Understanding the Anatomy of a Telescope 272
Gathering the light 272
Viewing the image with an eyepiece 273
Revolutionizing Refracting Telescopes 274
Galilean telescope 275
Kepler's enhancement 276
Reimagining Telescope Design: Reflecting Telescopes 277
Newtonian 277
Cassegrain 278
Gregorian 279
Hybrid Telescopes: Lenses and Mirrors Working Together 280
Schmidt 280
Maksutov 281
Invisible Astronomy: Looking Beyond the Visible 282
When One Telescope Just Won't Do: The Interferometer 283
Part VI: More Than Just Images: Getting into Advanced Optics 285
Chapter 20: Index of Refraction, Part 2: You Can Change It! 287
Electro-Optics: Manipulating the Index of Refraction with Electric Fields
287
Dielectric polarization: Understanding the source of the electro-optic
effect 288
Linear and quadratic: Looking at the types of electro-optic effects 289
Examining electro-optic devices 293
Acousto-Optics: Changing a Crystal's Density with Sound 295
The acousto-optic effect: Making a variable diffraction grating 295
Using acousto-optic devices 296
Frequency Conversion: Affecting Light Frequency with Light 297
Second harmonic generation: Doubling the frequency 297
Parametric amplification: Converting a pump beam into a signal beam 298
Sum and difference frequency mixing: Creating long or short wavelengths 299
Chapter 21: Quantum Optics: Finding the Photon 301
Weaving Together Wave and Particle Properties 301
Seeing wave and particle properties of light 302
Looking at wave and particle properties of matter 304
Experimental Evidence: Observing the Dual Nature of Light and Matter 306
Young's two-slit experiment, revisited 306
Diffraction of light and matter 307
The Mach-Zehnder interferometer 308
Quantum Entanglement: Looking at Linked Photons 308
Spooky action: Observing interacting photons 308
Encryption and computers: Developing technology with linked photons 309
Part VII: The Part of Tens 311
Chapter 22: Ten Experiments You Can Do Without a $1-Million Optics Lab 313
Chromatic Dispersion with Water Spray 313
The Simple Magnifier 314
Microscope with a Marble 314
Focal Length of a Positive Lens with a Magnifying Glass 314
Telescope with Magnifying Glasses 315
Thin Film Interference by Blowing Bubbles 316
Polarized Sunglasses and the Sky 316
Mirages on a Clear Day 317
Spherical Aberration with a Magnifying Glass 317
Chromatic Aberration with a Magnifying Glass 318
Chapter 23: Ten Major Optics Discoveries - and the People Who Made them
Possible 319
The Telescope (1610) 319
Optical Physics (Late 1600s) 320
Diffraction and the Wave Theory of Light (Late 1600s) 320
Two-Slit Experiment (Early 1800s) 321
Polarization (Early 1800s) 321
Rayleigh Scattering (Late 1800s) 321
Electromagnetics (1861) 322
Electro-Optics (1875 and 1893) 322
Photon Theory of Light (1905) 322
The Maser (1953) and The Laser (1960) 323
Index 325