A glass sphere has radius r=-50 cmand index of refraction n1=1.6paperweight is constructed by slicing through the sphere along a plane that is 2.0 cmfrom the center of the sphere, leaving height p = h = 3.0 cm. The paperweight is placed on a table and viewed from directly above by an observer who is distance d=8.0 cmfrom the tabletop (Fig. 34-39). When viewed through the paperweight, how far away does the tabletop appear to be to the observer?

Short Answer

Expert verified

The tabletop appears to be at a distance 7.4 cm from the observer.

Step by step solution

01

Step 1: Given

r=-50cmn1=1.6n2=1p=h=3.0cmd=8.0cm

02

Determining the concept

Usingthe relationbetweenthe index of the refraction of object and image,the image distance, the object distance, and the radius of curvature, given by equation,find the required answers.

Formula are as follows:

n1p+n2i=n2-n1r

Where, p is the pole, i is the image distance.

03

Determining how far away the tabletop appears to the observer 

Using sign convention, the radius of the sphere isr=-5.0cm

n1p+n2i=n2-n1rn2i=n2-n1r-n1pi=n2n2-n1r-n1pi=1.01.0-1.6-5.0-1.63.0i=-2.42cm

When viewed through the paperweight, the distance of the tabletop from the observer isd-h+i

Distance of tabletop from an observer=8-3+-2.42=5+2.42

Distance of tabletop from an observerrole="math" localid="1662979876733" =7.42cm7.4cm

Therefore, the tabletop appears to be at a distance 7.4 cm from the observer.

Using the relation between the index of refraction of object and image, image distance, object distance, and the radius of curvature, the required distance can be found.

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Most popular questions from this chapter

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 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 objector on the opposite side.

17 through 29 22 23, 29 More mirrors. Object O stands on the central axis of a spherical or plane mirror. For this situation, each problem in Table 34-4 refers to (a) the type of mirror, (b) the focal distance f, (c) the radius of curvature r, (d) the object distance p, (e) the imagedistance i, and (f) the lateral magnification m. (All distances are in centimeters.) It also refers to whether (g) the image is real (R)or virtual localid="1662996882725" (V), (h) inverted (I)or noninverted (NI)from O, and (i) on the same side of the mirror as object O or on the opposite side. Fill in the missing information. Where only a sign is missing, answer with the sign.

An object is placed against the center of a spherical mirror, and then moved70cmfrom it along the central axis as theimage distance i is measured. Figure 34-36 givesiversus object distancepout tops=40cm. What isifor p=70cm?

A penguin waddles along the central axis of a concave mirror, from the focal point to an effectively infinite distance. (a) How does its image move? (b) Does the height of its image increase continuously, decrease continuously, or change in some more complicated manner?

58 through 67 61 59 Lenses with given radii. An object Ostands in front of a thin lens, on the central axis. For this situation, each problem in Table 34-7 gives object distance p, index of refraction n of the lens, radius r1of the nearer lens surface, and radius r2of the farther lens surface. (All distances are in centimeters.) Find (a) the image distance and (b) the lateral magnification m of the object, including signs. Also, determine whether the image is (c) real (R)or virtual (V), (d) inverted (I)from the object Oor non-inverted (NI), and (e) on the same side of the lens as object Oor on the opposite side

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