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- [Voiceover] When you're dealing with these thin lenses,
you're going to have to use this formula right here,
one over f equals one over d-o plus one over d-i.
Not too bad, except when are these positive or negative?
Let's find out.
F is the focal length.
The focal length, when you've got a thin lens,
there's a focal point on each side of the lens.
The focal length is the distance from
the center of the lens to one of these focal points.
Which one, it's doesn't actually matter,
because if you want to know whether the focal length
is positive or negative, all you have to look at
is what type of lens you have.
In this case, we've got a convex lens,
also known as a converging lens.
It turns out, for these types of lenses,
the focal length is always, always, going to be positive.
If this focal length right here was, say, eight centimeters,
we would plug in positive eight centimeters.
It doesn't matter, we could have measured on this side.
This side will be eight centimeters.
We still plug in positive eight centimeters
into this focal length
if it is a converging, or a convex, lens.
If you had the other type of lens ...
Here's the other kind.
This one is either diverging
or it's going to be concave.
If you have a concave or diverging lens,
it also will have two focal points
typically drawn on either side.
These will be a certain distance along
that principal axis to the center of the lens.
If you measured this, by definition for a concave
or a diverging lens, the focal length is always
going to be a negative focal length.
So, if this distance here was eight centimeters,
you'd have to plug in negative eight centimeters
up here into the focal length.
All you need to look at is what type of lens you have.
D-o, d-i, doesn't matter.
D-o and d-i could be big, small,
positive, negative.
You could have a real image, a virtual image.
It doesn't matter.
All you have to look at is what type of lens you have.
That will tell you whether you should plug in
a positive focal length, or a negative focal length.
All right, so focal length isn't too bad.
How about d-o?
D-o represents the object distance.
If I had an object over here,
and we always draw objects as arrows.
That lets us know whether they're right-side up
or upside down.
Here's my object.
The object distance refers to the distance
from, always measured from the center of the lens
to where the thing is,
and in this case the thing is the object,
so here's my d-o.
This object distance ...
this one's even easier ...
object distance, just always positive.
So my object distance, I'm just always
going to make that positive.
If this is 30 centimeters, I'm plugging in
positive 30 centimeters over there.
If it's 40 centimeters, positive 40 centimeters.
Always going to be positive unless ...
there is one exception.
If you had multiple lenses it's possible
you might have to deal with a negative object distance,
but, if you're dealing with a single lens,
whether it's concave or convex,
I don't care what kind of lens it is,
if it's a single lens, your object distance
is going to be a positive distance
if you only have one lens.
Okay, so object distance is even easier.
Always positive, no matter what the case is,
if you have a single lens.
How about image distance?
Image distance is the tricky one.
This refers to the distance from the lens
to where the image is,
but your image can be on one side or the other.
Let's see here, let's say for this case over here
I ended up with an image upside down over here,
something like this.
Say this is my image that was formed by this object
in this converging, convex, lens.
Image distance is defined to be from the center
of the lens to where my image is,
always measured parallel to this principal axis.
Sometimes people get confused.
They think, well, am I supposed to measure
from the center here on this diagonal line?
No, you never do that!
You always go from the center,
parallel to the principal axis,
to where the image is.
This is defined to be the image distance.
When will this be positive and negative?
Here's the tricky one, so be careful.
Image distance will be positive if the image distance
is on this other side of the lens than the object.
One way to remember it is image distance
will be positive if it's on the opposite side
of the lens as the object,
or, the way I like to remember it,
if you're using this lens right, you should be looking,
your eye should be looking through the lens at the object.
Putting your eye over here does no good at all.
Really, your lens is kind of pointless now.
If my eye's over here, I'm looking at my object,
and I'm just holding a lens in front of it.
This is really doing no good.
So I don't want my eye over there.
If I'm using this lens right,
my eye would be over on this side,
and I'd be looking at this object,
I'd be looking through.
I'm not shooting light rays out of my eyes,
but I'm looking in this direction
through the lens at my object.
I wouldn't see the object.
What I would actually see is an image of the object,
I'd see this image right here,
but still, I'm trying to look through the lens.
A way to remember if the image distance is positive,
if this image distance has been brought closer
to your eye than the object was,
if it's on the side of this lens that your eye is on,
that will be a positive image distance.
So if it's on this, in this case, the right side,
but what's important is it's on
the opposite side of the object,
and the same side as your eye,
that's when image distance will be positive.
That'll be true regardless,
whether you've got a concave, convex, converging, diverging.
If the image is on the same side as your eye over here,
then it should be a positive image distance.
Now, for this diverging case,
maybe the image ended up over here somewhere.
I'm going to draw an image over here.
Again, image distance from the lens,
center of the lens, to where your image is,
so I'm going to draw that line.
This would be my image distance.
In this case, my eye still should be on this side.
My eye's on this side because I should be
looking through my lens at my object.
I'm looking through the lens at the object.
I'd see this image because this image is on
the opposite side of the lens as my eye,
or, another way to think about it,
it's on the same side of the object.
This would be a negative image distance.
I'd have to plug in a negative number,
or if I got a negative number out of this formula
for d-i, I would know that that image
is formed on the opposite side of the lens as my eye.
Those are the sign conventions for using
this thin lens formula.
But notice something.
This formula's only giving you these horizontal distances.
It tells you nothing about how tall the image should be,
or how tall the object is.
It only tells you these horizontal distances.
To know about the height,
you'd have to use a different formula.
That other formula was this magnification formula.
It said the magnification, M, equals
negative the image distance.
If you took the image distance
and then divided by the object distance
you'd get the magnification.
So we notice something.
We notice something important here.
If the image distance comes out negative,
we'd have magnification as negative
of another negative number,
object distance always positive,
so we'd have a negative of a negative,
that would give us a positive.
If our image distance comes out negative
like it did down here, then we'd get
a positive magnification and positive magnification
means you've got a right-side up image, if it's positive.
If our image distance came out to be positive,
like on this side, if we had a positive image distance,
we'd have a negative of a positive number,
that would give us a negative magnification.
That means it's upside down.
So it's important to note if our image distance
comes out negative, negative image distance
means not inverted, and positive image distance
means that it is inverted from whatever it was originally.
Let's look at a few examples.
Say you got this example.
It said find the image distance,
and it just gave you this diagram.
We're going to have to use this thin lens formula.
We'll have to figure out what f is, f, the focal length.
We've got these two focal lengths, here,
eight centimeters on both sides.
Should I make it a positive eight centimeters
or a positive eight centimeters?
Remember, the rule is that you just look at
what type of lens you have.
In this case, I have a concave lens,
or another way of saying that is a diverging lens.
Because I have that type of lens it doesn't matter.
I don't have to look at anything else.
I automatically know my focal length
is going to be one over negative eight centimeters.
One over negative eight centimeters equals
one over the object distance, here we go,
object over here, 24 centimeters away.
Should I make it positive or negative?
I've only got one lens here.
That means object distance is always going to be positive.
So that's one over positive 24 centimeters.
Now we can solve for our image distance.
One over d-i.
If I use algebra to solve here I'll have
one over negative eight centimeters
minus one over 24 centimeters,
and note, I can put this all in terms of centimeters,
I can put it all in terms of meters.
It doesn't matter what units I use here.
Those are the units I'll get out.
I just have to make sure I'm consistent.
So if I solve this on the left-hand side,
turns out you'll get negative one over six centimeters
equals, well, that's not what d-i equals.
That's what one over d-i equals,
so don't forget at the very end
you have to take one over both sides.
If you take one over both sides,
my d-i turns out to be negative six centimeters.
What does that mean?
D-i of negative six centimeters.
That means my image is going to be six centimeters
away from the lens, and the negative means
it's going to be on the opposite side as my eye
or the same side as my object.
My eye's going to be over here.
If I'm using this lens right, I've got my eye right here
looking for the image.
The negative image distance means
it's going to be over on the left-hand side, where?
Six means six centimeters and away from what?
Everything's measured from the center of the lens,
and so from here to there would be six centimeters.
This tells me on my principal axis,
my image is going to be right around here,
six centimeters away from the lens,
but it doesn't tell me,
note, this does not tell me how high
the image is going to be, how tall,
whether it's right-side up ...
Actually, hold on.
It does tell us whether it's right-side up.
This came out to be negative.
Remember our rule?
Negative image distances means it's got to be right-side up.
I'm going to have a right-side up image,
but I don't know how tall yet.
I'm going to have to use the magnification equation
to figure that out.
I'll come over here.
Magnification is negative d-i over d-o.
What was my d-i?
Negative of d-i was negative six,
so I'm going to plug in negative six centimeters.
On the bottom, I'm going to plug in,
let's see, it was 24 centimeters was my object distance.
What does that give me?
Negative cancels the negative, I get positive,
and I get positive one-fourth.
Positive one-fourth.
Remember, here, positive magnification means right-side up.
One-fourth means that my image is going to be
a fourth the size of my object.
If my object were, say, eight centimeters tall,
my image would only be two centimeters tall.
I'm going to draw an image here that's right-side up,
right-side up because I got a positive,
and it's got to be a fourth as big as my object,
so let's see, one-fourth might be around here,
so it's got to be right-side up
and about a fourth as big.
I'd get a really little image.
It'd be right around there.
That's what I would see when I looked through this lens.
That's an example of using the thin lens equation
and the magnification equation.