Approximation for very short wavelengths
THE electromagnetic field associated with the propagation of visible light is characterized by very rapid oscillations (frequencies of the order of 1014 s-1) or, what amounts to the same thing, by the smallness of the wavelength (of order 10-5 cm). It may therefore be expected that a good first approximation to the propagation laws in such cases may be obtained by a complete neglect of the finiteness of the wavelength. It is found that for many optical problems such a procedure is entirely adequate; in fact, phenomena which can be attributed to departures from this approximate theory (so-called diffraction phenomena, studied in Chapter VIII) can only be demonstrated by means of carefully conducted experiments.
The branch of optics which is characterized by the neglect of the wavelength, i.e. that corresponding to the limiting case λ0 ͢ 0, is known as geometrical optics since in this approximation the optical laws may be formulated in the language of geometry. The energy may then be regarded as being transported along certain curves (light rays). A physical model of a pencil of rays may be obtained by allowing the light from a source of negligible extension to pass through a very small opening in an opaque screen. The light which reaches the space behind the screen will fill a region the boundary of which (the edge of the pencil) will, at first sight, appear to be sharp.
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