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Colours in CDsYou may have noticed funky colours in CDs before, but where do they come from and why do they look different if you look at different lights? What you need
What to DoTurn a light on. Look at the reflection of the light in the CD, change the angle a bit and get an idea of what it looks like. Do the same thing with each of your lights and compare them.
What may HappenYou should find that you see funky colours in the reflection, but that all the lights don't look the same. A conventional lightbulb will produce a smooth rainbow.
A compact fluorescent light, or energy saving bulb, will produce a series of images of the bulb
A red LED bikelight won't produce any colours other than the red you can see normally. What is going on?All light is made up of a mixture of the colours of the rainbow. You can split these colours using a CD which will reflect different colours of light in different directions. If you look at different different parts of the CD the light will have bent at different angles so you see different colours.
Why do the different types of light appear different?Although an energy saving bulb and a conventional bulb both look white they are actually made up of a different mixture of colours. The spectrum of the conventional bulb is made up of all the colours of the rainbow, but the spectrum of the energy saving lightbulb is made up of several individual wavelengths of light with virtually nothing in between.
This means that when you look at the conventional light bulb in the CD you see an image of the bulb with each colour in a slightly different place. So you see all the images overlapping in a smooth rainbow. However, with the energy saving bulb there are only a few colours in the light so you just see a few images of different colours with space in between.
Some forms of light such as that from coloured LEDs or an old fashioned orange street light consists of only one colour so you can't see any form of rainbow. Why does a CD split up the light into its different colours?
A CD is made up of two two layers of plastic protecting a thin layer of aluminium on which is stored the actual information. This is stored in pits in the aluminium organised in a series of concentric circles. This means that you have lines of shiny aluminium that reflect well next to lines of pits which will reflect badly. Because the gaps between the pits are very close together, a distance equivalent to only a few times the wavelength of visible light , the reflections will interfere with one another in interesting ways. Light behaves like a wave, different colours have different wavelengths (blue short and red long) and the light waves reflecting from the gaps between the slits will interact with one another. In some directions the two waves will work together - constructively interfere, and in others they will work against one another - destructively interfere. The light reflecting off the cd will be the same as light coming through a series of holes in a plate - it is easier to see what is going on so this is how the diagrams have been drawn.
You get a very similar effect when you have multiple reflectors or slits, with light being reflected in some directions and not others. If you shine a different wavelength (colour) of light on the same slits you will get a different interference patterns. The bright areas of constructive interference will be further apart.
This means that the light from different colours will be bright in different directions so white light will be seperated into its constituent colours. Written by Dave Ansell |
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