Wave Theory: Micrographia Treatise On Light Luminiferous Ether
Wave Theory: Micrographia Treatise On Light Luminiferous Ether
Wave Theory: Micrographia Treatise On Light Luminiferous Ether
Christiaan Huygens.
The wave theory predicted that light waves could interfere with each other like sound
waves (as noted around 1800 by Thomas Young). Young showed by means of
a diffraction experiment that light behaved as waves. He also proposed that
different colors were caused by different wavelengths of light, and explained color vision
in terms of three-colored receptors in the eye. Another supporter of the wave theory
was Leonhard Euler. He argued in Nova theoria lucis et colorum (1746)
that diffraction could more easily be explained by a wave theory. In 1816 André-Marie
Ampère gave Augustin-Jean Fresnel an idea that the polarization of light can be
explained by the wave theory if light were a transverse wave.[36]
Later, Fresnel independently worked out his own wave theory of light, and presented it to
the Académie des Sciences in 1817. Siméon Denis Poisson added to Fresnel's
mathematical work to produce a convincing argument in favor of the wave theory, helping
to overturn Newton's corpuscular theory. [dubious – discuss] By the year 1821, Fresnel was
able to show via mathematical methods that polarization could be explained by the wave
theory of light if and only if light was entirely transverse, with no longitudinal vibration
whatsoever.[citation needed]
The weakness of the wave theory was that light waves, like sound waves, would need a
medium for transmission. The existence of the hypothetical substance luminiferous
aether proposed by Huygens in 1678 was cast into strong doubt in the late nineteenth
century by the Michelson–Morley experiment.
Newton's corpuscular theory implied that light would travel faster in a denser medium,
while the wave theory of Huygens and others implied the opposite. At that time,
the speed of light could not be measured accurately enough to decide which theory was
correct. The first to make a sufficiently accurate measurement was Léon Foucault, in
1850.[37] His result supported the wave theory, and the classical particle theory was
finally abandoned, only to partly re-emerge in the 20th century.
Electromagnetic theory
Main article: Electromagnetic radiation
A 3–dimensional rendering of linearly polarized light wave frozen in time and showing the two
oscillating components of light; an electric field and a magnetic field perpendicular to each other and
to the direction of motion (a transverse wave).