Simon Dean
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- Dec 28, 2006
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- Location
- Coventry - UK
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- www.simondeanmedia.co.uk
Inverse square law only works for point sources (Or something approximating it because it's far enough away) - the photons are emitted from a point onto the surface of a sphere with surface area 4 x Pi x r x r (or radius squared). So from the point source the distance you are away determines the surface area of that sphere and therefore the number of photons you receive.
Non-point source are miles more complicated. Lasers being the ultimate in sending the photons in the same direction (Not coherence, that's to do with the waves being in phase).
So you can imagine with a soft source the photons are being sent all over the place, whilst a reflection off a shiny surface can actually end up focussing the light more - you receive more photons.
The light then diminishes according to scattering and how parallel the rays are from the source (or new source in the case of reflection and diffusion) - the less parallel the less you receive.
Hope that helps!
Non-point source are miles more complicated. Lasers being the ultimate in sending the photons in the same direction (Not coherence, that's to do with the waves being in phase).
So you can imagine with a soft source the photons are being sent all over the place, whilst a reflection off a shiny surface can actually end up focussing the light more - you receive more photons.
The light then diminishes according to scattering and how parallel the rays are from the source (or new source in the case of reflection and diffusion) - the less parallel the less you receive.
Hope that helps!