REFRACTION AND DISPERSION!
Thanks to Willebrord Snellius
(1580–1626).
λ1n1 = λ2n2
When light travels from one transparent
medium to another, its frequency cannot change, but its phase
speed does. This requires its wavelength to change, so that
the frequency times the new wavelength is equal to the new
phase speed.
Indices of refraction can vary from a
hair above 1.0 up to 2.5 or more.
Because of a resonance in the
ultraviolet, the index of refraction for materials that
are transparent to visible light increases as the
wavelength decreases. Thus n(λ) is always
largest for violet light and smallest for red light.
Recently physicists have been exploring
the construction of so-called "meta-materials," which have
negative index of refraction! There are an enormous
number of potential technological applications for such
materials, which usually look like huge arrays of
microscopically tiny antennas.
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