32 through 38 37, 38 33, 35 Spherical refracting surfaces. An object Ostands on the central axis of a spherical refracting surface. For this situation, each problem in Table 34-5 refers to the index of refraction n1where the object is located, (a) the index of refraction localid="1663039333438" n2on the other side of the refracting surface, (b) the object distance p, (c) the radius of curvature rof the surface, and (d) the image distance i. (All distances are in centimeters.) Fill in the missing information, including whether the image is (e) real (R)or virtual (V)and (f) on the same side of the surface as the object Oor on the opposite side.

Short Answer

Expert verified

a) The index of refraction n2on the other side of the refracting surface is .

b) The object distance p is +10 cm.

c) The radius of curvature r of the surface is -30 cm.

d) The image distance i is -7.5 cm.

e) The image is virtual and upright.

f) The image and object are on the same side.

Step by step solution

01

Step 1: Given

  • Refractive index, n1=1.5n2=1.0
  • Radius of curvature, r = -30 cm
  • The image distance, i = -7.5 cm
02

Determining the concept

The index of refraction of the object and image, the image distance, and the radius of curvature are given in the problem. Using this data and equation, find the object distance and check whether the image is real or virtual, and find the position of the image.

Formulae are as follows:

n1p+n2i=n2-n1r, where p is the pole, and i is the image distance.


03

(a) Determining the index of refraction n2 on the other side of the refracting surface

The index of refraction on the other side of the refracting surface is given in the table 34-5. So,n2=1.0

Therefore, the index of refraction n2on the other side of the refracting surface is 1.0.

04

(b) Determining the object distance p

From theequation,
n1p+n2i=n2-n1r

Rearranging the terms,

n1p=n2-n1r-n2ip=n1n2-n1r-n2i

Substituting the given values,

p=1.51.0-1.5-30-1.0-7.5p=+10cm

Therefore, the object distance p is +10 cm.

05

(c) Determining the radius of curvature r of the surface

The radius of curvature is given in the problem, r = -30 cm.

Therefore, the radius of curvature r of the surface is -30 cm.

06

(d) Determining the image distance i

The image distance is given in the problem, i = -7.5 cm.

Therefore, the image distance i is -7.5 cm.

07

(e) Determine whether the image is real or virtual

Since, i < 0, therefore the image virtual and upright.

Therefore, the image is virtual and upright.

08

(f) Determine the position of the image

For spherical refracting surfaces, real images form on the opposite sides of the object and virtual images form on the same side as the object.

Since the image is virtual, therefore theimage is on the same side as that of the object.

Therefore, the image and object are on the same side.

The required quantities can be found by using the relation between the index of refraction of the object and image, the image distance, the object distance, and the radius of curvature.

Unlock Step-by-Step Solutions & Ace Your Exams!

  • Full Textbook Solutions

    Get detailed explanations and key concepts

  • Unlimited Al creation

    Al flashcards, explanations, exams and more...

  • Ads-free access

    To over 500 millions flashcards

  • Money-back guarantee

    We refund you if you fail your exam.

Over 30 million students worldwide already upgrade their learning with Vaia!

One App. One Place for Learning.

All the tools & learning materials you need for study success - in one app.

Get started for free

Most popular questions from this chapter

You produce an image of the Sun on a screen, using a thin lens whose focal length is 20cm. What is the diameter of the image? (See Appendix C for needed data on the Sun.)

A millipede sits 1.0min front of the nearest part of the surface of a shiny sphere of diameter 0.70m(a) How far from the surface does the millipede’s image appear? (b) If the millipede’s height is 2.0mm, what is the image height? (c) Is the image inverted?

80 through 87 80, 87 SSM WWW 83 Two-lens systems. In Fig. 34-45, stick figure O (the object) stands on the common central axis of two thin, symmetric lenses, which are mounted in the boxed regions. Lens 1 is mounted within the boxed region closer to O, which is at object distance p1. Lens 2 is mounted within the farther boxed region, at distance d. Each problem in Table 34-9 refers to a different combination of lenses and different values for distances, which are given in centimeters. The type of lens is indicated by C for converging and D for diverging; the number after C or D is the distance between a lens and either of its focal points (the proper sign of the focal distance is not indicated). Find (a) the image distance i2for the image produced by lens 2 (the final image produced by the system) and (b) the overall lateral magnification Mfor the system, including signs.Also, determine whether the final image is (c) real(R) or virtual (V), (d) inverted (I)from object O or non-inverted (NI), and (e) on the same side of lens 2 as the object O or on the opposite side.

80 through 87 80, 87 SSM WWW 83 Two-lens systems. In Fig. 34-45, stick figure O (the object) stands on the common central axis of two thin, symmetric lenses, which are mounted in the boxed regions. Lens 1 is mounted within the boxed region closer to O, which is at object distance p1. Lens 2 is mounted within the farther boxed region, at distance d. Each problem in Table 34-9 refers to a different combination of lenses and different values for distances, which are given in centimeters. The type of lens is indicated by C for converging and D for diverging; the number after C or D is the distance between a lens and either of its focal points (the proper sign of the focal distance is not indicated). Find (a) the image distance i2for the image produced by lens 2 (the final image produced by the system) and (b) the overall lateral magnification Mfor the system, including signs. Also, determine whether the final image is (c) real (R)or virtual (V), (d) inverted(I) from object O or non- inverted (NI), and (e) on the same side of lens 2 as object O or on the opposite side.

Figure 34-47a shows the basic structure of the human eye. Light refracts into the eye through the cornea and is then further redirected by a lens whose shape (and thus ability to focus the light) is controlled by muscles. We can treat the cornea and eye lens as a single effective thin lens (Fig. 34-47b). A “normal” eye can focus parallel light rays from a distant object O to a point on the retina at the back of the eye, where the processing of the visual information begins. As an object is brought close to the eye, however, the muscles must change the shape of the lens so that rays form an inverted real image on the retina (Fig. 34-47c). (a) Suppose that for the parallel rays of Figs. 34-47a and b, the focal length fof the effective thin lens of the eye is 2.50 cm. For an object at distance p = 40 cm, what focal length f of the effective lens is required for the object to be seen clearly? (b) Must the eye muscles increase or decrease the radii of curvature of the eye lens to give focal length f?

See all solutions

Recommended explanations on Physics Textbooks

View all explanations

What do you think about this solution?

We value your feedback to improve our textbook solutions.

Study anywhere. Anytime. Across all devices.

Sign-up for free