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Introduction to SAT II Physics - FreeExamPapers

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Optics<br />

HAVING STUDIED WAVE PHENOMENA generally, let’s take a look at the special case<br />

of electromagnetic waves. EM waves are transverse traveling waves produced by the<br />

oscillations of an electric field and a magnetic field. Because they are not transmitted by<br />

any material medium, as sound waves are through air molecules, EM waves can travel<br />

through the vacuum of space and give us valuable information about the universe beyond<br />

the Earth’s atmosphere. Electromagnetic waves play a great many roles in our lives: we<br />

use EM waves of different wavelengths <strong>to</strong> microwave our dinner, <strong>to</strong> transmit radio<br />

signals, and <strong>to</strong> x-ray for broken bones. Most important, we are only able <strong>to</strong> see because<br />

our eyes can detect the EM waves that make up the spectrum of visible light.<br />

Optics is the study of visible light, and how light can be manipulated <strong>to</strong> produce visual<br />

images.<br />

The Electromagnetic Spectrum<br />

Electromagnetic waves travel through a vacuum at the speed of light,<br />

m/s.<br />

As we’ll see in the next chapter, this is the fastest speed there is: anything faster resides at<br />

present only in the realm of theoretical speculation. Because the speed of EM waves is<br />

constant, we can calculate a wave’s frequency if we know its wavelength, and vice versa:<br />

Wavelength and frequency are the only qualities that distinguish one kind of EM wave<br />

from another. As a result, we can list all the kinds of EM waves on a one-dimensional<br />

graph called the electromagnetic spectrum.<br />

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