7th Grade Science Student ebook

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

4.3 Light and Living Things.


CHAPTER 4: CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS CONNECTIONS

Lenses


A lens and its
optical axis

A lens is an object that is designed to refract light in a specific way.
Many devices you use contain lenses (Figure 4.16). All lenses have
an imaginary line that goes through the center called an axis.
While there are different kinds of lenses, light traveling along the
axis of any lens is not bent. There are two basic kinds of lenses;
convex and concave.

Convex lenses Light rays that enter a convex lens parallel to its axis refract and
meet at a point called the focal point. The distance from the center
of the lens to the focal point is the focal length. Convex lenses are
sometimes called converging lenses.

Concave lenses Light rays that enter a concave lens parallel to its axis refract and
spread out, diverging (moving apart from each other) as they exit
the lens. The focal point of a concave lens is located on the same
side of the lens as the light source. Imaginary lines are drawn
backward in the opposite direction of the diverging rays. The focal
point is where the imaginary lines meet. The distance from the
focal point to the center of the lens is its focal length. Concave
lenses are sometimes called diverging lenses.

Figure 4.16: Some devices that use
lenses.

lens - an object designed to
refract light in a specific way.
focal point - a point where light
rays meet.
focal length - the distance from
the center of the lens to the focal
point.
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