Ways of Thinking About Light
You have probably heard
two different ways of talking about light:
- There is the "particle"
theory, expressed in part by the word photon.
- There is the "wave" theory, expressed
by the term light wave.
From the time of the ancient
Greeks, people have thought of light as a stream
of tiny particles. After all, light travels in
straight lines and bounces off a mirror much like
a ball bouncing off a wall. No one had actually
seen particles of light, but even now it's easy
to explain why that might be. The particles could
be too small, or moving too fast, to be seen,
or perhaps our eyes see right through them.
The idea of the light wave
came from Christian Huygens, who proposed in the
late 1600s that light acted like a wave instead
of a stream of particles. In 1807, Thomas Young
backed up Huygens' theory by showing that when
light passes through a very narrow opening, it
can spread out, and interfere with light passing
through another opening. Young shined a light
through a very narrow slit. What he saw was a
bright bar of light that corresponded to the slit.
But that was not all he saw. Young also perceived
additional light, not as bright, in the areas
around the bar. If light were a stream of particles,
this additional light would not have been there.
This experiment suggested that light spread out
like a wave. In fact, a beam of light radiates
outward at all times.
Albert Einstein advanced
the theory of light further in 1905. Einstein
considered the photoelectric effect, in which
ultraviolet light hits a surface and causes electrons
to be emitted from the surface. Einstein's explanation
for this was that light was made up of a stream
of energy packets called photons.
Modern physicists believe
that light can behave as both a particle and a
wave, but they also recognize that either view
is a simple explanation for something more complex.
In this article, we will talk about light as waves,
because this provides the best explanation for
most of the phenomena our eyes can see.
What is Light?
Why is it that a beam of
light radiates outward, as Young proved? What
is really going on? To understand light waves,
it helps to start by discussing a more familiar
kind of wave -- the one we see in the water. One
key point to keep in mind about the water wave
is that it is not made up of water: The wave is
made up of energy traveling through the water.
If a wave moves across a pool from left to right,
this does not mean that the water on the left
side of the pool is moving to the right side of
the pool. The water has actually stayed about
where it was. It is the wave that has moved. When
you move your hand through a filled bathtub, you
make a wave, because you are putting your energy
into the water. The energy travels through the
water in the form of the wave.
All waves are traveling
energy, and they are usually moving through some
medium, such as water. You can see a diagram of
a water wave in Figure 1. A water wave consists
of water molecules that vibrate up and down at
right angles to the direction of motion of the
wave. This type of wave is called a transverse
wave.
Light waves are a little
more complicated, and they do not need a medium
to travel through. They can travel through a vacuum.
A light wave consists of energy in the form of
electric and magnetic fields. The fields vibrate
at right angles to the direction of movement of
the wave, and at right angles to each other. Because
light has both electric and magnetic fields, it
is also referred to as electromagnetic radiation.
Light waves come in many
sizes. The size of a wave is measured as its wavelength,
which is the distance between any two corresponding
points on successive waves, usually peak-to-peak
or trough-to-trough. The wavelengths of the light
we can see range from 400 to 700 billionths of
a meter. But the full range of wavelengths included
in the definition of electromagnetic radiation
extends from one billionth of a meter, as in gamma
rays, to centimeters and meters, as in radio waves.
Light is one small part of the spectrum.
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