Refractive indexSee also list of indices of refraction. The refractive index of a material at a particular frequency is the factor by which electromagnetic radiation of that frequency is slowed down (relative to vacuum) when it travels inside the material. For a non-magnetic material, the square of the refractive index is the dielectric constant (sometimes multiplied by , the permittivity of free space). For a general material it is given by where is the permeability of free space. The speed of all electromagnetic radiation in vacuum is the same, approximately 3×108 meters per second, and is denoted by speed of light. \nSo if is the phase velocity of radiation of a specific frequency in a specific material, the refractive index is given by This number is typically bigger than one: the denser the material, the more the light is slowed down. However, at certain frequencies (e.g. near absorption resonances, and for x-rays), will actually be smaller than one. This does not contradict the theory of relativity, which holds that no information-carrying signal can ever propagate faster than , because the phase velocity is not the same as the group velocity or the signal velocity. The phase velocity is defined as the rate at which the crests of the waveform propagate; that is, the rate at which the phase of the waveform is moving. The group velocity is the rate that the envelope of the waveform is propagating; that is, the rate of variation of the amplitude of the waveform. It is the group velocity that (almost always) represents the rate that information (and energy) may be transmitted by the wave, for example the velocity at which a pulse of light travels down an optical fibre. Sometimes, a "group velocity refractive index", usually called the group index is defined: , where is the group velocity. This value should not be confused with , which is always defined with respect to the phase velocity. At the microscale an electromagnetic wave is slowed in a material because the electric field creates a disturbance in the charges of each atom (primarily the electrons) proportional to the permittivity. This oscillation of charges itself causes the radiation of an electromagnetic wave that is slightly out-of-phase with the original. The sum of the two waves creates a wave with the same frequency but shorter wavelength than the original, leading to a slowing in the wave's travel. If the refractive indices of two materials are known for a given frequency, then one can compute the angle by which radiation of that frequency will be refracted as it moves from the first into the second material from Snell's law. Recent research has also demonstrated the existence of negative refractive index which can occur if and are simultaneously negative. Not thought to occur naturally this can be achieved with so called meta materials and offers the possibility of perfect lenses and other exotic phenomena such as a reversal of Snell's law.
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