The speed of light in a vacuum, called c (celerity) is a constant at 300 000 km/sec.
In another material, it will be significantly slower. Perhaps as low as 0.5. These 'high refractive glasses' are of immense value in optics and lanthanum is one of the rare earths that are used. Seldom does the refractive index exceed 2.0 however.
The speed of light in a vacuum is taken as 1.0 (by definition), and the refractive index is the (speed of light in vacuo) / (speed of light in the substance).
Organic liquids have values greater than 2.0, and are used with cover glasses in microscopy - the 'oil immersion lens' application.
The velocity of light travelling through a material relates to the index of refraction of that material. In this group, air has the lowest index of refraction, follow by water, fused quartz, and crown glass. This means like travels the fastest through air, then water, then fused quarts, and finally glass.
In glass, light will go somewhat slower than in a vacuum. Air is almost like a vacuum, with respect to the speed of light - some difference still exists, though.In glass, light will go somewhat slower than in a vacuum. Air is almost like a vacuum, with respect to the speed of light - some difference still exists, though.In glass, light will go somewhat slower than in a vacuum. Air is almost like a vacuum, with respect to the speed of light - some difference still exists, though.In glass, light will go somewhat slower than in a vacuum. Air is almost like a vacuum, with respect to the speed of light - some difference still exists, though.
It varies, depending on the material. Typical speeds are about 2/3 the speed of light in a vacuum. Search for a table of "index of refraction" for different materials. If a certain material has an index of refraction of 1.5, that means the speed of light in that material is 1.5 times slower than in a vacuum, so you calculate 300,000 km/sec divided by 1.5 = 200,000 km/sec (where the first speed is the speed of light in a vacuum, and the second is the speed of light in the particular material).
Light travels fastest through vacuum, which is the absence of any material. In other materials, light typically travels slightly slower due to interactions with the atoms or particles in the material.
The property of a material that indicates how much the speed of light changes as it passes through is called the material's refractive index. This index is a measure of how much the speed of light is reduced in a material compared to its speed in a vacuum. The higher the refractive index, the more the speed of light is reduced in that material.
2 (no units)
A vacuum, so no material
Sound will propagate through any matter, but not a vacuum, light will propagate through a vacuum, but only through transparent matter.
Light does not refract via a single material. Refraction occurs when light passes from one material into another of a different density. It is the amount of difference in densities that causes the refraction. The greater the difference the greater the refraction. I believe that the densest material would be diamond, so light passing through a diamond and into a vacuum would seem to be the greatest difference, causing the greatest refraction.
Light can travel in a vacuum or in any transparent material
The velocity of light travelling through a material relates to the index of refraction of that material. In this group, air has the lowest index of refraction, follow by water, fused quartz, and crown glass. This means like travels the fastest through air, then water, then fused quarts, and finally glass.
The index of refraction.
In glass, light will go somewhat slower than in a vacuum. Air is almost like a vacuum, with respect to the speed of light - some difference still exists, though.In glass, light will go somewhat slower than in a vacuum. Air is almost like a vacuum, with respect to the speed of light - some difference still exists, though.In glass, light will go somewhat slower than in a vacuum. Air is almost like a vacuum, with respect to the speed of light - some difference still exists, though.In glass, light will go somewhat slower than in a vacuum. Air is almost like a vacuum, with respect to the speed of light - some difference still exists, though.
The equation used to determine the speed of light in a given material is v = c / n, where v is the speed of light in the material, c is the speed of light in a vacuum, and n is the refractive index of the material.
The speed of light in indium is approximately 197,000 km/s, which is slightly slower than the speed of light in a vacuum, which is about 299,792 km/s. This difference is due to the interaction of light with the atomic structure of the material.
It varies, depending on the material. Typical speeds are about 2/3 the speed of light in a vacuum. Search for a table of "index of refraction" for different materials. If a certain material has an index of refraction of 1.5, that means the speed of light in that material is 1.5 times slower than in a vacuum, so you calculate 300,000 km/sec divided by 1.5 = 200,000 km/sec (where the first speed is the speed of light in a vacuum, and the second is the speed of light in the particular material).
The speed of light is greatest in vacuum, and somewhat less in any material medium. The exact number depends on the individual material. They're all different.