Difference between revisions of "AY Honors/Optics/Answer Key"
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This is sometimes used for providing security through covert viewing of public spaces like stores from private offices, for protection of covert cameras, and for police interrogation rooms where witnesses can view the proceedings. It has even been used by nefarious landlords to spy on tenants most private spaces. But, it can be detected by the wary. | This is sometimes used for providing security through covert viewing of public spaces like stores from private offices, for protection of covert cameras, and for police interrogation rooms where witnesses can view the proceedings. It has even been used by nefarious landlords to spy on tenants most private spaces. But, it can be detected by the wary. | ||
− | Other techniques of camouflage can also be used with ordinary glass, for special effects | + | Other techniques of camouflage can also be used with ordinary glass, for special effects such as [[Pepper's ghost]], which projects the image of a person from one room to another as an apparition, as used in Anaheim California's Disneyland exhibit "[[The Haunted Mansion]]". The effect can also be produced by a finely perforated white metal screen that is difficult to see through in one direction, depending on the relative light levels of the separated spaces. |
− | To take full advantage of the partially mirrored surface to appear like a mirror, one side should be brightly lit, to camouflage any hint of light coming through the glass from the darkened side. The darkened room is only completely secure or non-viewable, when it is completely dark there. Sometimes a darkened curtain or an airlock type vestibule with double doors are used on that side to keep out light. Careful control of the lighting must also be used. Detectives or witnesses on the darkened side should be cautioned not to light a cigarette when close to the glass | + | To take full advantage of the partially mirrored surface to appear like a mirror, one side should be brightly lit, to camouflage any hint of light coming through the glass from the darkened side. The darkened room is only completely secure or non-viewable, when it is completely dark there. Sometimes a darkened curtain or an airlock type vestibule with double doors are used on that side to keep out light. Careful control of the lighting must also be used. Detectives or witnesses on the darkened side should be cautioned not to light a cigarette when close to the glass. Wily criminals in the examination room, have been known to put their eyes near the glass and cup their hands around their face and peer through. A flashlight held against the glass can also be used to peer through and illuminate the opposite side. |
− | Office workers | + | Office workers who work in offices with reflective glass on the outside, should know that their activities, not visible during the daytime from the outside, are quite visible at night in their well-lit areas. |
[[Category:Architecture]] | [[Category:Architecture]] |
Revision as of 07:40, 26 June 2007
The so-called one-way glass, two-way mirror or mirrored glass is a technique that exploits the use of an enclosed darkened room and an enclosed well-lit room separated by a pane of highly reflective glass. This is not an ordinary mirror, but something that only appears to be a mirror. This glass is coated with a very thin almost transparent layer of metal to enhance its reflective nature. The result is what appears to be a mirror from one side, and slightly tinted glass from the other. A person on the brightly lit room has difficulty seeing into the darkened room, through what appears to be a mirror.
This is sometimes used for providing security through covert viewing of public spaces like stores from private offices, for protection of covert cameras, and for police interrogation rooms where witnesses can view the proceedings. It has even been used by nefarious landlords to spy on tenants most private spaces. But, it can be detected by the wary.
Other techniques of camouflage can also be used with ordinary glass, for special effects such as Pepper's ghost, which projects the image of a person from one room to another as an apparition, as used in Anaheim California's Disneyland exhibit "The Haunted Mansion". The effect can also be produced by a finely perforated white metal screen that is difficult to see through in one direction, depending on the relative light levels of the separated spaces.
To take full advantage of the partially mirrored surface to appear like a mirror, one side should be brightly lit, to camouflage any hint of light coming through the glass from the darkened side. The darkened room is only completely secure or non-viewable, when it is completely dark there. Sometimes a darkened curtain or an airlock type vestibule with double doors are used on that side to keep out light. Careful control of the lighting must also be used. Detectives or witnesses on the darkened side should be cautioned not to light a cigarette when close to the glass. Wily criminals in the examination room, have been known to put their eyes near the glass and cup their hands around their face and peer through. A flashlight held against the glass can also be used to peer through and illuminate the opposite side.
Office workers who work in offices with reflective glass on the outside, should know that their activities, not visible during the daytime from the outside, are quite visible at night in their well-lit areas.