THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA
 
BIOL/PHYS 438 Assignment # 5:
 
OPTICS
 
Thu. 1 Mar. 2007 - finish by Thu. 15 Mar.
  1. CATARACT OPERATION:

    1. BA's right eye was producing blurred images because the lens was getting "cloudy" and scattering some light. A cataract operation was performed where the natural lens was replaced by an artificial lens . . . .

      The natural lens had n = 1.413 and radii of curvature r1 = 10 mm and r2 = 7.8 mm when focused at infinity. What was its focal length?

    2. It was replaced by an artificial symmetric lens with r = r1 = r2 made from crown glass (n = 1.52), what radius r gives the same focal length as before?

    3. What should be the radius of curvature if the lens were made from silicate flint glass with n = 1.65?

  2. IMAGING BY THE HUMAN EYE: Find the distance i1 of first image I1 made by the human cornea (r = 7.8 mm) of an object placed at o1 = 250 mm. Assume that the index of refraction of the material behind the cornea is n = 1.336.

    This image serves as the (virtual) object (object distance o2 = -i1) from which the eye lens creates a real image I2 on the retina at the image distance i2 = 20 mm. The eye lens must contract to create a sharp image of such a close-distance object. Find the radius of curvature of the eye lens when focused at the object, assuming that the lens contracts symmetrically so that r250 = r1 = r2.

  3. FLY EYES: Flies have compound eyes with many individual photo detectors. Assume the facet eyes of a certain fly consist of tiny light pipes of d = 50 µm diameter, length L = 200 µm and ne = 1.52, mounted on a hemispherical shell of radius r1 and capped by a conical structure of height B = 50 µm and ne = nc = 1.52. The top diameter of each cone is D = 100 µm. The light pipes and cones have cylindrical geometry. Typically r2 = 2 mm. The tissue between these optical structures has nt = 1.33.

    1. How many facet eyes are there in each compound eye if the cones touch each other?

    2. What is the critical angle $\theta_{\rm cr}$ of total internal reflection in the light pipe?

    3. What is the acceptance angle $\beta$ for the light pipe section by itself, figure (ii)?

    4. What is the cone angle $\delta$?

    5. Explain qualitatively why the acceptance angle $\gamma$ for light pipe and cone, figure (iii), is smaller than $\beta$.

    6. Name 5 other animals that have compound eyes.

  4. NOW YOU SEE ME, NOW YOU DON'T:

    1. Find and sketch 3 examples of optical illusions. Explain how the eye has been deceived in each case.

    2. Describe one example of an optical trick used by an animal to hide from or scare off its predators.

    3. Describe an example of an animal that appears colorful due to either interference or diffraction, and explain in words what the "optical components" do to the light waves to generate the colors.



Jess H. Brewer 2007-02-28