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Why does the
world get dark so quickly as you move away from the circle of light
from a campfire?
We all know
that a light, such as a candle or a streetlight, looks dimmer the
farther away from it we get.
The question
of how much dimmer it looks was answered a long time ago.
Here's a simple
experiment you can perform to repeat that discovery.

Requirements:
-
A
flashlight: A point source of light is required for this so
a tiny flashlight bulb is best
-
Cardboard
-
Graph
paper
-
A
file card.
-
A
knife or scissors.
Unscrew the front
reflector assembly of the torch to expose the bulb. The bulb on the
torch™ will come on and stay on even when the reflector assembly
is removed.
Now cut a l/2 x
1/2 inch (1.3 x 1.3 cm) square hole in the file card. Hold or mount
the card 1 inch (2.5 cm) in front of the light source. The square of
light made when the light shines through this hole will shine on the
graph paper. Keep
the distance between the bulb and the card with the square hole constant
at 1 inch (2.5 cm). Put the graph paper at different distances from
the bulb, and count how many squares on the graph paper are lit at each
distance. The results will be easier to understand if you make a table
of "number of squares lit" versus "distance." Be sure to measure the
distance from the bulb.
 The light from
the bulb™ spreads out equally in all directions.
As the distance
from the bulb to the graph paper increases, the same amount of light
spreads over a larger and larger area, and the light reaching each square
becomes correspondingly less intense.
For example, adjust
the distance from the bulb to the graph paper to 1 inch (2.5 cm). At
this distance, the graph paper touches the card. A single 1/2 inch (1.3
cm) square area will be illuminated.
When the graph paper
is moved 2 inches (5 cm) from the card, four 1/2 inch (1.3 cm) squares
will be illuminated on the graph paper.
When the graph paper
is moved 3 inches (8 cm) from the card, 9 squares will be illuminated.
At 4 inches (10 cm), 16 squares will be illuminated, and so on.
The area illuminated
will increase as the square of the distance.
The intensity
of light is the power per area. Since the energy that comes through
the hole you cut is spread out over a larger area, the intensity of
light decreases. Since the area increases as the square of the distance,
the intensity of the light must decrease as the inverse square of the
distance. Thus, intensity follows the inverse-square
law. |