English

Images in Christmas Balls

Physics Education 2007-05-23 v3 Optics

Abstract

We describe light-reflection properties of spherically curved mirrors, like balls in the Christmas tree. In particular, we study the position of the image which is formed somewhere beyond the surface of a spherical mirror, when an eye observes the image of a pointlike light source. The considered problem, originally posed by Abu Ali Hasan Ibn al-Haitham -- alias Alhazen -- more than a millennium ago, turned out to have the now well known analytic solution of a biquadratic equation, being still of great relevance, e.g. for the aberration-free construction of telescopes. We do not attempt to perform an exhaustive survey of the rich historical and engineering literature on the subject, but develop a simple pedagogical approach to the issue, which we believe to be of continuing interest in view of its maltreating in many high-school textbooks.

Cite

@article{arxiv.physics/0503069,
  title  = {Images in Christmas Balls},
  author = {Eef van Beveren and Frieder Kleefeld and George Rupp},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:physics/0503069},
  year   = {2007}
}

Comments

13 pages, 7 figures plain LaTeX; Also see http://cft.fis.uc.pt/eef/mirrors.htm, revised version has simplified formulas, more transparent for a wider audience, one reference added