Optical phenomena are any observable events that result from the interaction of light and matter.
All optical phenomena coincide with quantum phenomena. Common optical phenomena are often due to the interaction of light from the Sun or Moon with the atmosphere, clouds, water, dust, and other particulates. One common example is the rainbow, when light from the Sun is reflected and refracted by water droplets. Some phenomena, such as the green ray, are so rare they are sometimes thought to be mythical. Others, such as Fata Morganas, are commonplace in favored locations.
Other phenomena are simply interesting aspects of optics, or optical effects. For instance, the colors generated by a prism are often shown in classrooms.
Scope
Optical phenomena encompass a broad range of events, including those caused by atmospheric optical properties, other natural occurrences, man-made effects, and interactions involving human vision (entoptic phenomena). Also listed here are unexplained phenomena that could have an optical explanation and "optical illusions" for which optical explanations have been excluded.
There are multiple phenomena that result from either the particle or the wave nature of light. Some are quite subtle and observable only by precise measurement using scientific instruments. A famous example is the bending of starlight by the Sun during a solar eclipse, a phenomenon that serves as evidence for the curvature of space as predicted by the theory of relativity.
Atmospheric optics
Non-atmospheric optical phenomena
Other optical effects
- Asterism, star gems such as star sapphire or star ruby
- Aura, a phenomenon in which gas or dust surrounding an object luminesces or reflects light from the object
- Aventurescence, also called the Schiller effect, spangled gems such as aventurine quartz and sunstone
- Baily's beads, grains of sunlight visible in total solar eclipses.
- Camera obscura, an inverted projection of a scene into a dark chamber
- Cathodoluminescence
- Caustics
- Chatoyancy, cat's eye gems such as chrysoberyl cat's eye or aquamarine cat's eye
- Chromatic polarization
- Diffraction, the apparent bending and spreading of light waves when they meet an obstruction
- Dispersion
- Double refraction or birefringence of calcite and other minerals
- Double-slit experiment
- Electroluminescence
- Evanescent wave
- Fluorescence, also called luminescence or photoluminescence
- Mie scattering (Why clouds are white)
- Metamerism as of alexandrite
- Moiré pattern
- Newton's rings, an alternating ring pattern created by the reflection of light between a spherical and flat surface
- Phosphorescence
- Pleochroism gems or crystals, which seem "many-colored"
- Rayleigh scattering (Why the sky is blue, sunsets are red, and associated phenomena)
- Reflection
- Refraction
- Sonoluminescence
- Shrimpoluminescence
- Synchrotron radiation
- The separation of light into colors by a prism
- Triboluminescence
- Thomson scattering
- Total internal reflection
- Twisted light
- Umov effect
- Zeeman effect, the splitting of a spectral line into multiple components in the presence of a magnetic field
- The ability of light to travel through space or through a vacuum.
Entoptic phenomena
Optical illusions
Unexplained phenomena
Some phenomena are yet to be conclusively explained and may possibly be some form of optical phenomena.
See also
References
Source
Further reading
- Thomas D. Rossing and Christopher J. Chiaverina, <cite>Light Science: Physics and the Visual Arts</cite>, Springer, New York, 1999, hardback,
- Robert Greenler, <cite>Rainbows, Halos, and Glories</cite>, Elton-Wolf Publishing, 1999, hardback,
- <cite>Polarized Light in Nature</cite>, G. P. Können, Translated by G. A. Beerling, Cambridge University Press, 1985, hardcover,
- M.G.J. Minnaert, Light and Color in the Outdoors,
- John Naylor "Out of the Blue: A 24-hour Skywatcher's Guide", CUP, 2002,
- Abenteuer im Erdschatten (German).
- The Marine Observers' Log
External links