WEIZMANN
SCHOOL OF SCIENCE
APEX_PUBLIC_USER
Course Identification
Title:
Physics module: Introduction to modern optics
Code:
20186222
Lecturers and Teaching Assistants
Lecturers:
Prof. Dan Oron
TA's:
Dr. Dekel Raanan, Dr. Gur Lubin
Course Schedule and Location
Year:
2018
Semester:
Second Semester
When / Where:
Thursday, 09:00 - 11:00, Weissman, Seminar Rm B
Tutorials
Thursday, 13:00 - 14:00, Weissman, Seminar Rm B
First Lecture:
15/03/2018
Field of Study, Course Type and Credit Points
Science Teaching (non thesis MSc Track): Lecture; Obligatory; 3.00 points
Comments
N/A
Prerequisites
No
Restrictions
Participants:
20
Other:
For students in the Rothschild-Weizmann program only
Language of Instruction
Hebrew
Attendance and participation
Expected and Recommended
Grade Type
Numerical (out of 100)
Grade Breakdown (in %)
Assignments:
30%
Final:
70%
Evaluation Type
Examination
Scheduled date 1
Date / due date
10/07/2018
Location
Weissman, Seminar Rm A
Time
1000-1300
Remarks
N/A
Scheduled date 2
Date / due date
N/A
Location
N/A
Time
-
Remarks
N/A
Estimated Weekly Independent Workload (in hours)
2
Syllabus
History of optics: Optics is the ancient world, particle and wave descriptions of optics ; First experimental evidence of wave nature of light ; Maxwell’s equations and electromagnetic waves ; The birth of quantum mechanics ; Particle-wave duality for light ; the concept of “photons”
Color and color perception: Color as the frequency dependence of electromagnetic waves. White versus monochromatic light. The concept of a spectrum. Different types of light sources. Color perception and the CIE diagram. Monochrome versus RGB displays and cameras.
Geometrical Optics: Reflection and refraction. Snell’s law and the Fresnel principle. Simple optical elements: Mirrors, Prisms, spherical lenses, aspheres.
The wave equation. Transverse and longitudinal waves. Polarization of light. Brewster’s angle and its applications. Birefringence. Polarizers and waveplates. Liquid crystals as tunable birefringent elements. Applications of liquid crystals. Multilayer reflection and anti-reflection coatings. Simple experiments on light polarizations.
Dispersion of light: Prisms as dispersive elements. Gratings. Design of a spectrometer.
Imaging and the resolution limits of optical microscopy. The Abbe and Rayleigh resolution criteria. The difference between localization accuracy and resolution. The notion of superresolution microscopy.
The notion of coherence. Temporal coherence. Spatial coherence. Interferometry.
Optical fibers and optical waveguides. Mechanisms of light guiding in a medium and applications in imaging and endoscopy.
Light sources and light detection: lasers versus lamps ; types of lamps ; spectrum of emitted light from lamps; Basics of lasers. types of detectors. The CCD camera. The photomultiplier tube. Photodiodes. Bolometers.
Learning Outcomes
Upon successful completion of this course students should be able to:
Demonstrate understanding of basic wave and ray picture of optics and their relationships,
Demonstrate understanding of basic everyday optical phenomena,
Demonstrate understanding of principles behind important technologies as lasers and fiberoptics.
Reading List
Books:
Hecht (Optics)
Goodman (introduction to Fourier optics)
Website
N/A
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