- Back - Forward - Home - Book - Course - Teachers - Fun - Search - Home Print
English - Chinese The Optics Book - G.O. and Thin lenses Written by:Karen
chijues

Related Articles:

converging lens Applet
diverging lens Applet
Diverging Mirror Applet
Forum
Comments and Suggestions

In this section:

The Optics Book

1. Before Optics
2. Light and Illumination
3. Reflection and refraction
4. Geometrical Optics and thin lenses

lenses.htm">Thin lenses
Ray Diagrams
lenses.htm"> Equations
Mirrors
lenses.htm">
lenses.htm">Practical Aplications
Movie Projector
photocopy machine
Magnifying Glass
5. The human eye
6. Optics instruments
7. Scattering & spectrum
8. Color
9. Interferences & difraction
10. Polarization
11. Quantic Optics

lenses.htm">lenses Aplications: Movie Projector - photocopy machine - Magnifying Glass


Magnifying Glass

            In those old detective movies, before all those high tech instruments had been developed, the detective always has a magnifying glass to inspect the crime scene.  Perhaps you have wondered how a magnifying glass actually works.  It just seems like a piece of glass attached to a handle, but then windows are glass, and when we look through them the outside does not seem to be magnified.  This is because the glass in a magnifying glass is acting as a lens.  It is actually curved sLightly to form a convex lens, while the glass in our windows are plane glass. 

            The magnifying glass is not projecting an image onto anything; it is merely bending the Light rays from the object so that the object will appear larger.  The magnifying glass is an example of a Case 6 situation, of which the object is between the center of the lens and F, and the image is magnified, virtual and upright, and on the same side.  This is why a magnifying glass only works when it is close enough to the object (because the object must be between the center and F).

lenses4.gif" width="105" height="160">
Magnifying Glass
Credits: Karen Wu
 
The Optics. Made by Karen, Timothy and, César for ThinkQuest . 1999 - 2000 All rights reserved