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Create a timeline how Light is discovered​

Sagot :

400 BC – Emission theory of vision

Greek philosopher and mathematician Plato develops the emission theory of vision – we see because our eyes emit straight vision beams.

300 BC – First writings about reflection and refraction

Greek mathematician Euclid writes Optica. He asserts that light travels in straight lines and proposes mathematical formulae for reflection and refraction.

160 AD – Ptolemy and refraction

Roman astronomer Ptolemy writes about the refraction of light and further develops the emission theory of vision – objects are seen by rays of light emanating from the eyes.

984 – Ibn Sahl and refraction

Persian scientist Ibn Sahl writes On burning mirrors and lenses, which sets out his understanding of how curved mirrors and lenses bend and focus light. He discovers a law of refraction mathematically equivalent to Snell’s law (1615).

1021 – Intromissionist theory

Arab scientist Ibn al-Haytham contends that vision occurs because of rays entering the eye (intromissionist theory). He also contends that magnification is due to refraction, and he makes the link between glass curvature and magnification.

1250 – Roger Bacon and reflection

English philosopher Roger Bacon uses parts of glass spheres as magnifying glasses and discovers that light reflects from objects rather than being released from them.

1604 – How the eye focuses light

German mathematician and astronomer Johannes Kepler describes how the eye focuses light and specifies the laws of rectilinear propagation of light.

1615 – Snell’s law

Snell’s law (named after Dutch astronomer Willebrord Snellius but first accurately described by Ibn Sahl in 984) describes the relationship between the angles of incidence and refraction when referring to light passing through a boundary between two different media.

1668 – Corpuscular theory expanded

Isaac Newton expands the theory originally set forward by Pierre Gassendi that light is made up of small discrete particles called ‘corpuscles’ to claim that light is made up of different parts.

Statue of Sir Isaac Newton

Sir Isaac Newton (1643–1726) entered Cambridge University in 1661. He was elected a Fellow of Trinity College in 1667 and Lucasian Professor of Mathematics in 1669. He remained at the university, lecturing in most years, until 1696.

1672 – Colours explained

Isaac Newton demonstrates how white light can be separated into a spectrum of colours with a prism. He develops ideas about different colours of light being absorbed, transmitted or reflected. His book Opticks is released to the public in 1704.

1678 – Wave theory

Dutch physicist Christiaan Huygens argues that light consists of waves and uses this theory to explain double refraction. Thomas Young’s experiments (1801) support Huygens’s wave theory.

1860 – Electromagnetic field

James Clerk Maxwell explains that electricity, magnetism and light are all manifestations of the same phenomenon – the electromagnetic field.

1899 – Planck’s theory

Max Planck models black body radiation by assuming that the exchange of energy between light and matter only occurs in discrete amounts he called quanta.

1905 – Interpretation of the photoelectric effect

Albert Einstein publishes a mathematical description of the photoelectric effect. This establishes that light consists of particles or ‘discrete quanta’. These particles later became known as photons.

i make it short for you :)