Subject: Physics
If a point object is placed on the axis of the large lens, images Ip and Im will be formed by the paraxial and marginal rays respectively. The paraxial rays of light from the image at a longer distance from the lens than the marginal rays. The image is not sharp at any point on the axis. If the screen is placed perpendicular to the axis at AB, the image appears to be a circular patch of diameter AB. The patch of diameter AB is called the circle of least confusion and corresponds to the position of the best image. The distance ImIp measures the longitudinal spherical aberration and the radius of the circle of least confusion measures the lateral spherical aberration. When the aperture of the lens is relatively large compared to the focal length of the lens, the cones of the rays of light refracted through different zones of the lens surface are not brought to focus at the same point on the axis. The marginal rays come to focus at a nearer point Im and the paraxial rays come to focus at a farther point Ip. Thus for point object O on the axis, the image extends over the length ImIp . This effect is called spherical aberration and arises due to the fact that different annular zones have different focal lengths.
The spherical aberration produced by a concave lens is shown in the figure. It is positive for the convex lens and negative for the concave lens, both paraxial and marginal rays cannot focus at a single point. The rays incident on the lens near the principal axis are called paraxial rays and the rays falling near the edge are called marginal rays.
For a single lens, spherical aberration cannot be entirely eliminated. However, it can be reduced by following methods:
When an electromagnetic radiation is an incident on an electric charge at rest, the charges particle accelerates along the direction of the electric field of the incident radiation. Since the electric charge is at rest, it does not experience any force due to magnetic field of the electromagnetic radiations in all the directions, and this process is called scattering. The scattering of light by the matter and he found that the intensity of a particular wavelength of the scattered light depends on its wavelength. Lord Rayleigh found that the intensity of the light corresponding to a wavelength of the scattered light varies inversely as the fourth power of the wavelength.
$$ \text {amount of scattering} \propto \frac {1}{\lambda ^4} $$
It is also called Rayleigh law of scattering.
When light from the sun travels through the earth’s atmosphere, the different wavelength of light gets scattered from their path through different amounts obeying Rayleigh’s law of scattering. Since, the wavelength of the blue colour is approximately half the wavelength of red colour, the scattering of blue light is about 24 times i.e. 16 times more than that of red light. Due to this, blue colour predominates and the sky appears blue.
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