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FEATURED ESSAYS
1. Light: A Fundamental Force In Our...
2. Atomic Structure
3. Extinction Of Dinos
4. Fundamental Orders Of Connecti
5. Inventor Project April 1, 1996 Al...
6. The Scarlet Letter: Darkness Illu...
7. Critical Summary: Descartes' Medi...
8. No Exit
9. Is Einstein About To Be Dethro
10. The Cosmos: Creation
11. No Exit 2
12. Vision
13. Technology Has Influenced Our
14. The Dome Of The Rock In Jerusalem


Light: A Fundamental Force In Our World


   If asked what light is, one could say that it's one of the most basic
elements of our world and our universe as we perceive it. It is through
sight that we receive 90% of our information. It is through the use of
telescopes aiding the naked eye that we are aware of the heavenly bodies
around us. It is through light that the energy from the sun is transferred
to us. The sun's energy supports the food chain; plants use it to turn
water and CO2 into energy usable by other organisms. Solar energy was also
used, indirectly, to produce all of the fossil fuels that we consume daily.
Since light is such a basic part of our existence, we should have a basic
understanding of what it is.

  What we call light, the intangible, powerful force that powers our world,
is somewhat hard to define in real terms. It shares properties with both
particles and waves. It follows the same rules as a wave does--it moves in
a regular fashion, in a perfect sine wave at a certain frequency. It
travels in a straight line, and is subject to refraction. All of these
characteristics are found in waves of any type, from radio frequency waves,
up to Gamma and X- rays. Light, however, also exhibits qualities
characteristic of particles such as neutrons and protons. A photon, or
quanta, is the "packet" of energy that is sent in a light wave. Like a
particle, the photon is believed to have a finite mass, and has the ability
to affect other matter. As light strikes a photovoltaic solar cell, it
knocks electrons in the silicon atoms on the surface into a higher state of
energy. When these return to their normal, or "ground" state, energy is
produced in the form of electricity. Thus, light is termed a "wave-
particle," and this property is called the "wave-particle duality of
nature." Many questions concerning what makes up light still lie unanswered,
but this much is thought to be true.

  Light can be produced in a variety of ways. Our sun, like other stars,
uses nuclear fusion to produce energy in the form of light and radiation.
We can produce light artificially using several methods. If one starts a
fire, it produces light and heat. (Heat, which is infrared radiation, is
another type of light energy.) The light and heat are a result of a
chemical reaction, the combining of oxygen with the carbon in the wood.
This reaction leaves behind products which have less potential energy than
they started with. The energy, which left as light and heat, was produced
when electrons dropped in energy levels during the reaction. The excess
energy from one atom was given off as a photon, producing light. If one
examines a fluorescent or incandescent light bulb, one can see that all it
is doing is having electricity stimulate a metallic or gaseous substrate,
causing it to give off photons. The principle is the same as it was with
the fire, only it is more controlled. Still more controlled is the laser,
which puts out its photons in a single frequency. This is achieved through
a carefully designed apparatus which stimulates materials in a way that
allows them to only put out light at a certain wavelength. Laser light is,
therefore, of all one color. White light, or sunlight, is a broad mixture
of wavelengths. All methods of producing light, natural and artificial,
share one common feature: they rely on electrons changing energy levels to
produce the photons.

  As there are a variety of methods of producing light, so are there a
multitude of ways it can be applied. The most obvious use of light is in
supporting our food chain. Without light energy, nothing could live on our
planet. The plants, which are at the bottom of the food chain, supply
energy to all other organisms. We as humans are adapted to having sunlight
around us, and taking in information with our eyes. Aside from keeping us
alive, light is also employed in highly specialized applications. Laser
light is being used in surgery. The highly concentrated beam of light is
far more precise than any surgeon's hand, and much finer than the sharpest
blade. In the area of communications, light is used in fiber optic networks
for fast, crystal-clear connections. (Fiber optics allow light to travel in
a finely directed path with very little distortion.) Optical components in
computers are starting to see use. Also, lasers are being used to produce
holographic images, both for industrial and commercial markets. Holographic
pictures can show an object three dimensionally, and in great detail.
Finally, new ways of utilizing the sun's energy are being developed that
will allow light to be more efficiently converted to electricity. Thus,
light indeed has a wealth of applications.

  It must be remembered that, like most other things around us, light is
something utilized on a daily basis, yet little understood. With continued
research, we may someday unravel the mysteries surrounding this unique
force which is constantly at work in our universe. The applications of
light in the present are nothing compared with what could be gained if we
could understand this strange mechanism; it may someday be the key to
solving our energy problems, or unlocking the secret of the universe.


ADDITIONAL FEATURED ESSAYS
Newton's Law Of Universal Gravitation
Gravity if one of the four fundamental forces in the universe. Though the fundamental principles of it eluded scientists
Symbolism In The Great Gatsby
Throughout the novel Fitzgerald uses symbolism quite often. For example Daisy’s voice, the green light at the end of her
Dreams And Dreaming
“ To write something and leave it behing us, It is but a dream When we awake we know There is not even anyone to
"A World Of Light And Dark"
"Let me not to the marriage of true minds/ Admit impediments...," begins Shakespeare in his "Sonnet 116". This work is a
The Luminescence Of Black Light
Black Light. What is it? It is a portion of the Ultra-Violet Spectrum that is invisible to our eyes. We can not distingu



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