Copyright © Michael Richmond.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
Interference and the Two-slit Experiment
This lecture is based on Sections 27.1 to 27.2.
- The Principle of Superposition states that when several
light waves coincide, the result is equal to the sum of the
individual waves. Phases are important!
- If two light waves of same wavelength and phase travel different
distances to reach the same point, their interference will be
- constructive if difference in path length is integer number of
wavelengths
- destructive if difference in path length is half-integer number of
wavelengths
- The double-slit experiment forces light waves to interfere on a
distant wall after travelling different distances
- Consider a point on the distant wall a distance
y = L sin(theta)
away from the center point. Light will interfere
- constructively (light spot) if
d sin(theta) = m lambda m = 0, 1, 2, ...
- destructively (dark spot) if
d sin(theta) = (m + 1/2) lambda m = 0, 1, 2, ...
where d is the separation of the two slits, and lambda
is the wavelength of the light.
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Copyright © Michael Richmond.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.