Module 4 Optical Instruments
Module 4 Optical Instruments
Module 4 Optical Instruments
PHYSICS
MODULE 4
Optical Instruments
In the previous modules, you learned about the properties of light. You also learned
how images are formed by mirrors and lenses. Now it is time to apply these ideas to some
common optical lenses and to show how such devices work.
In this module you will study different optical instruments in the following lessons:
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2. Answer the pretest before you start the lessons.
3. Check your answers against the key to answers provided at the last page of the
module.
4. After taking the pretest, read and study carefully the different lessons on optical
instruments.
5. Perform all the activities to have a better understanding of the topic.
6. Take the self-tests at the end of each lesson for you to determine how much you
learn and remember about the lesson.
7. Take the posttest prepared at the end of the module for you to assess how much
you learned from this module.
Have fun in learning these lessons about optical instruments! Good luck!
1. Which part of the human eye refracts rays and forms the image of an object?
a. cornea c. lens
b. iris d. retina
2. A camera forms an image in a sensitive film while an eye forms the image on the
c. cornea c. pupil
d. iris d. retina
3. Which statement about the parts of the eye and their uses is FALSE?
a. The eyelid opens or shuts the eye.
b. The iris enables the eye to see nearby objects.
c. The pupil controls the intensity of the incoming light.
d. The retina serves as the screen where the image is formed.
4. A farsighted person needs a convex lens as this lens can make the image fall
a. on the eyeball c. on the retina of the eye
b. before the retina of the eye d. beyond the retina of the eye
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6. Which of the following optical instruments does NOT form a real, inverted and smaller
image?
a. camera c. pinhole camera
b. human eye d. simple microscope
7. An optical device used to see very far or distant objects clearly is the
a. camera c. simple microscope
b. compound microscope d. telescope
8. A compound microscope is an optical system. Which statement does NOT describe it?
a. It makes small objects look bigger.
b. It is used to magnify distant objects clearly.
c. It consists of two converging lens - an objective lens and an eyepiece.
d. It has an eyepiece that enlarges the image created by the objective lens.
____________ 1. The part of the eye where the image of an object is formed
____________ 2. The part of the camera which corresponds to the iris of the eye
____________ 3. The kind of lenses used to correct nearsightedness
____________ 4. The ability of the eye to adjust the shape of its lens in order to focus
on objects at different distances
____________ 5. An eye defect which focuses the image beyond the retina
____________ 6. A lens prescribed to correct presbyopia
____________ 7. An optical device that forms magnified virtual and erect image
____________ 8. An optical device to magnify very distant objects
____________ 9. An optical system consisting of two converging lenes that magnifies
a magnified object
____________ 10. A technique to reproduce image through interference effect
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Lesson 1 The Human Eye
The eye is the most remarkable optical instrument. What are the parts of the human
eye?
The eye is spherical in shape and is about 2.5 cm in diameter. The essential parts of
the human eye, considered as an optical system, are shown on Figure 1.1.
3. The inner coat, or retina covers only the rear portion of the eyeball. The nerves
of the eyes spread through the retina, forming a light sensitive screen to receive
images. Structures in the retina, known as rods, enables us to see in the dark.
6. The pupil is the opening in the center of the iris. In a dark room the pupil
becomes larger to admit more light, in bright sunlight it becomes smaller reducing
the amount of light admitted thus protecting the retina from damage by exposure
to intense light.
7. Behind the lens, the eye is filled with a thin watery jelly called vitreous humor.
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8. The eyelids act as shutters to screen out the light and, in general, to protect the
eye.
Look at the eye of another person. Identify the parts of the eye that you can see.
For an object to be seen clearly or sharply, the image must be formed exactly on the
retina. To see objects at different distances, the eye adjusts itself by changing the shape of
its lens. If the object is near, the image distance increases and the lens become rounder
and thicker. Its focal length is shortened so that the image distance is kept constant and the
image is kept on the retina.
If the object is far, the image distance decreases such that the muscles attached to
the outer edges of the eye lens cause the lens to become thinner and flatter. This increases
its focal length and enables the image to be focused sharply on the retina.
This ability of the eye to focus the image of an object at different distances is called
the power of accommodation.
When the eye muscles are perfectly relaxed as when a person is looking at a distant
object, the lens has its greatest focal length and is said to be adapted to the far point. When
the object is so near that the lens has its shortest possible focal length, the object is said to
be at the near point.
For a normal eye, the shortest distance for distinct vision is 25 centimeters. The lens
muscles are completely relaxed when we look at objects more than 6 meters away.
When the eye loses its ability to change the shape of its lens, vision becomes poor
and defective. Properly chosen eye glasses are needed to correct these eye defects.
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1. Nearsightedness or myopia
A nearsighted person or myope can see near objects clearly but has
difficulty focusing on far objects. This occurs when you have a long eyeball and
lenses that are too convex, causing the image to be formed in front of the retina.
Eyeglasses with concave lenses are prescribed to correct nearsightedness.
2. Farsightedness or hyperopia
A farsighted person or hyperope can see very far objects clearly but has
difficulty focusing on near objects. This is due to having a short eyeball and too
flat lenses that cause the image to be formed beyond the retina. Eyeglasses with
convex lenses are prescribed to correct farsightedness.
Study figure 1.4 which shows the image formation in a farsighted individual
and how it is corrected by a convex lens.
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3. Presbyopia
4. Astigmatism
Fig 1.5
The lines are not all equally distinct
if the eye is astigmatic.
Your eyes enable you to see the color and beauty of things around you. Sometimes
you do not like to leave and forget such sights. To have an exact and permanent record of
them, you use a camera.
A good way to find out how a camera works is to make a simple one.
Procedure:
1. Get a milk can and remove its cover. Make a tiny hole in the center of its bottom using a
small nail and hammer. (Figure 1.6a)
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2. Make a tiny tube out of the black cartolina. The tube must fit into the can. Cover one
end of the tube with wax paper. (Figure 1.6b)
3. Slide the covered end of the black tube into the can. You now have a pinhole camera.
(Figure 1.7)
4. Point the pinhole to a distant object such as a building or tree. View this object through
the open end of the black tube. Move the tube to get a clearer view of the object on the
wax paper. The wax paper serves as the screen for the camera.
Fig. 1.7
Fig. 1.6
Answer these:
2. Compare what you see on the wax paper with the object to which the camera is pointed.
(Figures 1.8) ___________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________
The real camera has a lens instead of a pinhole and uses a film for a screen instead
of a wax paper.
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The basic elements of a camera are, namely: a converging lens, a light sensitive film
to record an image, and a shutter to let the light from the lens strike the film. The lens forms
an inverted, real and smaller image in the film.
When the camera is in proper focus, the position of the film coincides with the
position of the real image formed by the lens. With a converging lens, the image distance
increases as the object distance decreases. Hence in focusing the camera, the lens is
moved closer to the film for a distant object and farther from the film for a nearby object.
Often, this is done by turning the lens in a threaded mount.
Know This:
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What you will do
Self-Test 1.1
A. Fill up the blanks in Table 1.1 which gives the similarities between a camera and a
human eye in terms of their parts and functions.
B. Answer this: Give two differences between a camera and a human eye.
1. _________________________________________________________________
2. _________________________________________________________________
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What you will do
Activity 2.1
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Compound Microscope
(a) (b)
Fig. 2.2
(a) Elements of a compound microscope; (b) Ray diagram of
image formation in a compound microscope
A compound microscope makes a small object look bigger so that our eye can see it.
A compound microscope consists of two converging lenses of short focal lengths: the
objective lens and the eyepiece lens. The object is placed close to the focal point of the
objective lens to form the first image, which is an enlarged, real and inverted image. This
image falls between the eyepiece lens and its focus and becomes the object for the
eyepiece lens. The eyepiece forms a final virtual and enlarged image at a distance of 25
cm for distinct vision. This final image in the microscope becomes the object for the eye
which forms a real image on the eye’s retina.
Telescope
A telescope is used to make distant objects look closer and appear bigger. It
consists of two converging lenses: the objective lens with a long focal length and the
eyepiece lens with a short focal length. The objective lens is used to collect light from a
distant object and to form the first image. The eyepiece lens is a magnifying lens which
produces a final virtual image at a distance.
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The optical system of a telescope is similar to that of a compound microscope. In
both instruments, the image formed by an objective lens is viewed through an eyepiece.
The key difference is that the telescope is used to view large objects at large distances and
the microscope is used to view small objects at a very close distance.
Fig. 2.3
(a) A telescope; (b) Ray diagram of image formation in an astronomical refracting
telescope
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What you will do
Self-Test 2.1
____________ 1. It consists of a converging lens that forms virtual, magnified and erect
image.
____________ 2. It is a lens system which makes distant objects appear bigger and closer.
____________ 3. It is a lens system which makes a small object look bigger.
____________ 4. It is a lens in a telescope used to collect light from a distant object to form
the first image.
____________ 5. It is the lens in a telescope which serves as a magnifying lens producing
a virtual image.
Lesson 3 Holography
What is a hologram?
Do you know?
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A conventional photograph is a recording of an image, but a hologram is a recording
of the interference pattern.
The basic procedure for making a hologram is shown in Figure 3.1. The object to be
holographed is illuminated by a laser light. LASER is the acronym for “light amplification by
stimulated emission of radiation”. Part of the light is reflected from the object to a
photographic plate. The rest of the light, called the reference beam, is reflected by a mirror
to the same plate. The two wavefronts interfere, and the interference pattern recorded on
the plate constitutes the hologram.
Holograph systems are used with laser beams to scan the universal bar codes on
grocery store items. Holograms have many other possible uses. They can store
tremendous amount of data in a limited space, give details of structural flaws in a machine
parts, display the interior of body organs, and bring three-dimensional television pictures
into your home.
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What you will do
Self-Test 3.1
______________________________________________________________________
Let’s Summarize
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e. retina – serves as a screen where the image is formed
2. A nearsighted individual can see near objects clearly but has difficulty focusing on
far objects. Nearsightedness is corrected with a concave lens.
3. A farsighted individual can see far objects clearly but has difficulty focusing near
objects. Farsightedness is corrected with eyeglasses with convex lens.
4. Astigmatism is due to unevenness in the curvature of the lens of the eyeball which
results to blurred vision. It is corrected with cylindrical lenses.
5. Presbyopia is the inability of the eye muscles to increase the roundness of the
lens, thus reducing its power of accommodation. Bifocal lens is prescribed to
remedy this defect.
6. A camera and a human eye both form real, inverted and smaller images of
objects.
8. In a camera, the lens is adjusted to form a sharp image while the eyes has the
power of accommodation to see near or far objects.
Posttest
1. Which part of the human eye regulates the amount of light entering the eye?
a. cornea c. lens
b. iris d. retina
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2. An eye forms the image on the retina while a camera forms image in the
a. diaphragm c. sensitive film
b. lens d. shutter
3. Which statement about the parts of the eye and their uses is true?
a. The pupil opens or shuts the eye.
b. The eyelid regulates the amount of light.
c. The iris enables the eye to see near object.
d. The retina serves as the screen where the image is formed.
4. The nearsighted person needs a concave lens. This lens can make the image fall
a. on the eyeball c. before the retina of the eye
b. on the retina of the eye d. beyond the retina of the eye
5. Which of the following can be done by a camera but not by the human eye?
a. form images of objects
b. adjust to dim and bright lights
c. change focus from short to long distances
d. give a permanent record of the scenes on which it is focused
6. Which of the following instruments form a magnified, virtual and erect image?
a. camera c. pinhole camera
b. human eye d. simple microscope
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B. Identify the terms or phrases referred to in the following.
____________ 1. The part of the camera where the image object is formed
____________ 2. The part of the eye which corresponds to the diaphragm of the
camera
____________ 3. The kind of lenses used to correct farsightedness
____________ 4. The ability of the eye to adjust the shape of its lens to focus on
objects at different positions
____________ 5. An eye defect which focuses the image in front of the retina
____________ 6. A lens prescribed to correct astigmatism
____________ 7. An optical device that forms bigger, erect and virtual image
____________ 8. An optical device that views a small object at close distance
____________ 9. An optical device that views a large object at very far distance
____________ 10. Light used to create a hologram
Key to Answers
Pretest
A. B.
1. c 6. d 1. retina 6. bifocal lens
2. d 7. d 2. diaphragm 7. magnifying glass or
3. b 8. b 3. concave lens simple microscope
4. c 9. b 4. power of accommodation 8. telescope
5. d 10. c 5. farsightedness or 9. microscope
hyperopia 10. holography
Lesson 1
Activity 1.1
The eyelid, cornea, iris, pupil are the parts of the eye that could be seen.
Activity 1.2
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Self-Test 1.1
A. B.
1. eyelid 1. In a camera, the lens is adjusted to
2. iris form a sharp image while the eyes is
3. regulates amount of light self-focusing. It has the power of
4. aperture accommodation to see near and
5. lens distant objects.
6. refracts light and forms the image 2. A camera gives a permanent record
7. retina of the image while the eye can retain
an image only at about 1/16 of a
second.
Lesson 2
Self-Test 2.1
Lesson 3
Self-Test 3.1
A. B.
1. b 1. A hologram is a record of an interference pattern while a photograph
2. c is a record of an image.
3. c 2. A hologram is capable of reconstructing an exact replica of the
4. d wavefront of an object
5. True 3. More than one hologram can be recorded in the same area of a
photographic plate.
4. In ordinary photography, a lens is used to form an image of an
object in photographic film. In holography, no image-forming lens is
used.
5. Holography makes use of laser light while in ordinary photography
ordinary light is used to form images.
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Posttest
A. B.
1. b 6. d 1. sensitive film 6. cylindrical lens
2. c 7. d 2. iris 7. simple microscope
3. d 8. c 3. convex 8. compound microscope
4. b 9. a 4. power of accommodation 9. telescope
5. d 10. d 5. nearsightedness 10. laser light
References
Dull, C. E., Metcalfe, H. E. & Williams, J. E. (1960). Modern physics. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston,
Inc.
Hewitt, P. G. (1993). Conceptual physics. (7th ed.) New York: Harper Collins College Publishers.
Padua, A. L. & Crisostomo, R. M. (1999). Science and technology IV: Physics. Quezon City: S.D.
Publications, Inc.
Santos, G. C. & Ocampo, J. P. (2003). Science and technology IV: Physics. Manila: Rex Bookstore, Inc.
Sotto, R. L. (2005). Science in today’s world: Physics. Philippine Copyright: SIBS Publishing House, Inc.,
Makati, Philippines.
U.P. Science Education Center. (1984). Physics in your environment: High school science IV. Manila:
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