PHYSIC FOR SCI & ENGINEERS W/MASTERING
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ISBN: 9781269651639
Author: GIANCOLI
Publisher: Pearson Custom Publishing
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Textbook Question
Chapter 33, Problem 70P
(III)·A reflecting telescope (Fig. 33–38b) has a radius of curvature of 3.00 m for its objective mirror and a radius of curvature of −1.50 m for its eyepiece mirror. If the distance between the two mirrors is 0.90 m, how far in front of the eyepiece should you place the electronic sensor to record the image of a star?
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Chapter 33 Solutions
PHYSIC FOR SCI & ENGINEERS W/MASTERING
Ch. 33.2 - If the leaf (object) of Example 332 is moved...Ch. 33.2 - Figure 3313 shows a converging lens held above...Ch. 33.4 - A Lucite planoconcave lens (sec Fig. 332b) has one...Ch. 33.6 - What power contact lens is needed for an eye to...Ch. 33.8 - A 40 telescope has a 1.2-cm focal length eyepiece....Ch. 33 - Where must the film be placed if a camera lens is...Ch. 33 - A photographer moves closer to his subject and...Ch. 33 - Can a diverging lens form a real image under any...Ch. 33 - Use ray diagrams to show that a real image formed...Ch. 33 - Light rays are said to be reversible. Is this...
Ch. 33 - Can real images be projected on a screen? Can...Ch. 33 - A thin converging lens is moved closer to a nearby...Ch. 33 - Compare the mirror equation with the thin lens...Ch. 33 - A lens is made of a material with an index of...Ch. 33 - Explain how you could have a virtual object.Ch. 33 - A dog with its tail in the air stands facing a...Ch. 33 - A cat with its tail in the air stands facing a...Ch. 33 - The thicker a double convex lens is in the center...Ch. 33 - Does the focal length of a lens depend on the...Ch. 33 - An underwater lens consists of a carefully shaped...Ch. 33 - Consider two converging lenses separated by some...Ch. 33 - Will a nearsighted person who wears corrective...Ch. 33 - You can tell whether people are nearsighted or...Ch. 33 - The human eye is much like a camerayet, when a...Ch. 33 - In attempting to discern distant details, people...Ch. 33 - Is the image formed on the retina of the human eye...Ch. 33 - Reading glasses use converging lenses. A simple...Ch. 33 - Why must a camera lens be moved farther from the...Ch. 33 - Spherical aberration in a thin lens is minimized...Ch. 33 - Prob. 26QCh. 33 - (I) A sharp image is located 373 mm behind a...Ch. 33 - (I) Sunlight is observed to focus at a point 18.5...Ch. 33 - (a) What is the power of a 23.5-cin-focal-length...Ch. 33 - (II) A certain lens focuses an object 1.85m away...Ch. 33 - (II) A 105-mm-focal-length lens is used to focus...Ch. 33 - (II) A stamp collector uses a converging lens with...Ch. 33 - (II) It is desired to magnify reading material by...Ch. 33 - (II) A 8.00-D lens is held 12.5 cm from an ant...Ch. 33 - (II) An object is located 1.50 m from an 8.0-D...Ch. 33 - (II) (a) How far from a 50.0-mm-focal-length lens...Ch. 33 - (II) How far from a converging lens with a focal...Ch. 33 - (II) (a) A 2.80-cm-high insect is 1.30 m from a...Ch. 33 - (II) A bright object and a viewing screen are...Ch. 33 - (II) How far apart are an object and an image...Ch. 33 - (II) Show analytically that the image formed by a...Ch. 33 - (II) In a slide or movie projector, the film acts...Ch. 33 - (III) A bright object is placed on one side of a...Ch. 33 - (III) (a) Show that the lens equation can be...Ch. 33 - (II) A diverging lens with f = 33.5cm is placed...Ch. 33 - (II) Two 25.0-cm-focal-length converging lenses...Ch. 33 - (II) A 34.0-cm-focal-lenglh converging lens is...Ch. 33 - (II) The two converging lenses of Example 335 are...Ch. 33 - (II) A diverging lens with a focal length of 14 cm...Ch. 33 - (II) Two lenses, one converging with focal length...Ch. 33 - (II) A diverging lens is placed next to a...Ch. 33 - (II) A lighted candle is placed 36 cm in from of a...Ch. 33 - (I) A double concave lens has surface radii of...Ch. 33 - (I) Both surfaces of a double convex lens have...Ch. 33 - (I) Show that if the lens of Example 33-7 is...Ch. 33 - (I) A planoconvex lens (Fig. 33-2a) is to have a...Ch. 33 - (II) An object is placed 90.0cm from a glass lens...Ch. 33 - (II) A prescription for a corrective lens calls...Ch. 33 - (I) A properly exposed photograph is taken at f...Ch. 33 - (I) A television camera lens has a 17-cm focal...Ch. 33 - (II) Suppose that a correct exposure is 1250S at f...Ch. 33 - (II) A nature photographer wishes to photograph a...Ch. 33 - (I) A human eyeball is about 2.0 cm long and the...Ch. 33 - (II) A person struggles to read by holding a book...Ch. 33 - (II) Reading glasses of what power are needed for...Ch. 33 - (II) If the nearsighted person in Example 33-13...Ch. 33 - (II) An eye is corrected by a 4.50-D lens, 2.0cm...Ch. 33 - (II) A persons right eye can see objects clearly...Ch. 33 - (II) A person has a far point of 14 cm. What power...Ch. 33 - (II) One lens of a nearsighted persons eyeglasses...Ch. 33 - (II) What is the focal length of the eye lens...Ch. 33 - (II) A nearsighted person has near and far points...Ch. 33 - (II) The closely packed cones in the fovea of the...Ch. 33 - (II) What is the focal length of a magnifying...Ch. 33 - (II) What is the magnification of a lens used with...Ch. 33 - (II) A magnifier is rated at 3.0 for a normal eye...Ch. 33 - (II) Sherlock Holmes is using an...Ch. 33 - (II) A small insect is placed 5.85 cm from a...Ch. 33 - (II) A 3.40-mm-wide holt is viewed with a...Ch. 33 - (II) A magnifying glass with a focal length of...Ch. 33 - (II) A magnifying glass is rated at 3.0 for a...Ch. 33 - (II) A converging lens of focal length = 12 cm is...Ch. 33 - (I) What is the magnification of an astronomical...Ch. 33 - (I) The overall magnification of an astronomical...Ch. 33 - (II) A 7.0 binocular has 3.0-cm-focal-length...Ch. 33 - (II) An astronomical telescope has an objective...Ch. 33 - (II) An astronomical telescope has its two lenses...Ch. 33 - (II) A Galilean telescope adjusted for a relaxed...Ch. 33 - (II) What is the magnifying power of an...Ch. 33 - (II) The Moons image appears to be magnified 120...Ch. 33 - (II) A 120 astronomical telescope is adjusted for...Ch. 33 - (II) An astronomical telescope longer than about...Ch. 33 - (III)A reflecting telescope (Fig. 3338b) has a...Ch. 33 - (III) A 7.5 pair of binoculars has an objective...Ch. 33 - (I) A microscope uses an eyepiece with a focal...Ch. 33 - (I) A 680 microscope uses a 0.40-cm-focal-length...Ch. 33 - (I) A 17-cm-long microscope has an eyepiece with a...Ch. 33 - (II) A microscope has a 13.0 eyepiece and a 58.0...Ch. 33 - (II) Repeat Problem 75 assuming that the final...Ch. 33 - (II) A microscope has a 1.8-cm-focal-length...Ch. 33 - (II) The eyepiece or a compound microscope has a...Ch. 33 - (II) An inexpensive instructional lab microscope...Ch. 33 - (III) Given two 12-cm-focal-length lenses, you...Ch. 33 - (II) A planoconvex lens (Fig. 332a) has one nut...Ch. 33 - (II) An achromatic lens is made of two very thin...Ch. 33 - A 200-mm-focal-lcngth lens can be adjusted so that...Ch. 33 - If a 135-mm telephoto lens is designed to cover...Ch. 33 - For a camera equipped with a 58-mm-focal-length...Ch. 33 - Show that for objects very far away (assume...Ch. 33 - A small object is 25.0 cm from a diverging lens as...Ch. 33 - A converging lens with focal length of 13.0cm is...Ch. 33 - An astronomical telescope has a magnification of...Ch. 33 - (a) Show that if two thin lenses of focal lengths...Ch. 33 - How large is the image of the Sun on film used in...Ch. 33 - Two converging lenses are placed 30.0 cm apart....Ch. 33 - When an object is placed 60.0 cm from a certain...Ch. 33 - Figure 33-49 was taken from the NIST Laboratory...Ch. 33 - A movie star catches a reporter shooting pictures...Ch. 33 - As curly morning passed toward midday, and the...Ch. 33 - A child has a near point of 15 cm. What is the...Ch. 33 - A woman can see clearly with her right eye only...Ch. 33 - What is the magnifying power of a +4.0-D lens used...Ch. 33 - A physicist lost in the mountains tries to make a...Ch. 33 - A 50-year-old man uses +2.5-D lenses to read a...Ch. 33 - An object is moving toward a converging lens of...Ch. 33 - The objective lens and the eyepiece of a telescope...Ch. 33 - Two converging lenses, one with f = 4.0 cm and the...Ch. 33 - Sam purchases +3.50-D eyeglasses which correct his...Ch. 33 - The proper functioning of certain optical devices...Ch. 33 - In a science-fiction novel, an intelligent...Ch. 33 - A telephoto lens system obtains a large...
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Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, physics and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.Similar questions
- If the lens of a person’s eye is removed because of cataracts (as has been done since ancient times), why would you expect an eyeglass lens of about 16 D to be prescribed?arrow_forwardCan an image be larger than the object even though its magnification is negative? Explain.arrow_forwardThe power for normal close vision is 54.0 D. In a vision-correction procedure, the power of a patient’s eye is increased by 3.00 D. Assuming that this produces normal close vision, what was the patient’s near point before the procedure?arrow_forward
- A symmetric double convex lens with a focal length of22.0 cm is to be made from glass with an index of refractionof 1.52. What should be the radius of curvature for eachsurface?arrow_forwardA spherical mirror is made by silver-coating half of the inside of a sphere of radius R = 20 cm. A light ray moves horizontally 5.0 cm above the axis of the mirror as in Fig.19.23. When reflected from the mirror, how far from the mirror does the ray cross the axis? You will need to use some trigonometry and geometry to solve this problem.arrow_forwardIn Example 23–4, show that if the object is moved 10.0 cmfarther from the concave mirror, the object’s image sizewill equal the object’s actual size. Stated as a multiple of thefocal length, what is the object distance for this “actual-sizedimage” situation?arrow_forward
- - Assume a ray travels a distance 500 meters in a medium with index of refraction nl=1.1 and a distance 60 meters in a medium with index of refraction n2=1.3 the optical path length is...............................؟arrow_forwardThe power of the lenses of a certain physician’s eyes is 59 D. Assume the distance between a retina and a lens in the human eye is 2.00 cm. When she carefully examines a patient, how far, in meters, must the patient be from her?arrow_forwardA light ray is incident normally to the long face (the hypotenuse)of a 45°–45°–90° prism surrounded by air, as shownin Figure 22.26b. Calculate the minimum index of refractionof the prism for which the ray will totally internally reflect ateach of the two sides making the right angle.arrow_forward
- Can a light ray traveling in air be totally reflected when itstrikes a smooth water surface if the incident angle is chosencorrectly? Explain.arrow_forwardOne method of measuring the focal length of a lens is to form an image of an object that is many focal lengths away from the lens. Show from equation (1/f=1/o+1/i) that the image distance is approximately equal to the focal length when the object distance is very large (say, o=100f). What happens when the object distance become infinitely far away?arrow_forward
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