PHY13 Lesson 4 Diffraction and Interference
PHY13 Lesson 4 Diffraction and Interference
INTERFERENCE
INTERFERENCE
Point a in the figure is equidistant from S1 and S2. Waves from the two
sources are in-phase when they arrive at a.
The distance from S2 to point b is exactly two wavelengths greater than
the distance from S1 to point b. Waves from the two sources are in-phase when
they arrive at b.
CONSTRUCTIVE INTERFERENCE: When waves from two or more
sources arrive at a point in-phase, the amplitude of the resulting wave is
the sum of the amplitudes of individual waves.
r2 – r1 = m
r2 – r1 = (m + ½)
The light coming from the two slits are always in-phase and are
therefore coherent.
A screen is placed at a distance R from the two slits.
TWO-SOURCE INTERFERENCE: Young’s Experiment
The light coming from the two slits form an interference pattern
on the screen. The pattern is an alternating dark and bright bands of
light.
The bright bands are where the two light sources interfere
constructively and the dark bands where they interfere destructively.
If the distance from the slits to the screen R is much greater
than the distance between the slits d, the lines from the two slits are
very nearly parallel when they strike the screen.
The difference in path length is given by
r2 – r1 = d sin
where is the angle between the line from the slits to screen
and the normal to the plane of the slits.
The bright regions on the screen occur at
d sin = m
(m = 0, ±1, ±2, ±3, ...)
The dark regions on the screen occur at
d sin = (m + ½)
Bright Fringes
3rd order
2nd order bright fringe
bright fringe m = +3
m = +2
1st order bright fringe m = +1
c.b.f m = 0
1st order bright fringe m = -1
2nd order
bright fringe
m=-2 3rd order
bright fringe
m = -3
DOUBLE-SLIT INTERFERENCE PATTERN
Dark Fringes
sin = m/d
R
m
ym (m = 0, ±1, ±2, ±3, ...)
d
1
m
ym R 2 (m = 0, ±1, ±2, ±3, ...)
d
EXAMPLE 1
EXAMPLE 1
EXAMPLE 2
EXAMPLE 2
y3 - y2 0.83mm
EXAMPLE 4
y1 R
0.5
4.00m
(0.5)400nm
4.00mm
d 0.200mm
1st dark line below CBF: m = 0
y1 R
0.5
(4.00m)
(0.5)400nm
4.00mm
d 0.200mm
y1 y1 8.00mm
EXAMPLE 4
(b) The 1st order bright fringe is between the 1st and second dark lines
(0.5)400nm
y1 (4.00m) 4.00mm
0.200mm
(1.5)400nm
y2 (4.00m) 12mm
0.200mm
y2 y1 8.00mm
EXAMPLE 5
For red: m =1
(1)660nm
y1red (5.00m) 11.0mm
0.300mm
For blue: m =1
( 1)470 nm
y1blue = ( 5.00 m) = 7.83 mm
0.300 mm
Huygen’s Principle:
Every point on a wave
front can be considered as the
source of secondary wavelets that
spread out in all directions with a
speed equal to the speed of
propagation of the wave.
Fraunhofer Diffraction – when both source and screen are far
enough from the obstacle such that all rays coming from the
source to the obstacle and all rays coming from the obstacle to the
source may be considered parallel.
SINGLE-SLIT DIFFRACTION
Consider a monochromatic light shining on a single slit of width
a and let a screen be at a certain distance x from the slit.
Consider two strips in the slit,
one just below the top edge of the slit
and one at the center.
The path difference to point P
is
(a/2) sin
If this path difference is equal to /2, then light from the two
strips arrive at point P half wavelength apart – destructive interference –
resulting in a dark fringe.
Light from every strip in the
top half of the slit cancels out the
corresponding light at the bottom half
of the slit.
Destructive interference (dark
fringes) occur whenever
2 3 4
sin , , ,...
a a a
Position of Dark Fringes in Single-Slit Diffraction:
sin = (m) / a
ym = x (m/a)
m
sin
a
3rd dark fringe m = +3
m
ym x 2nd dark fringe m = +2
a 1st dark fringe m = +1
m 1,2,3,... c.b.f
1st dark fringe m = -1
Positions of Bright Fringes
2nd dark fringe m = -2
ym x
m 1
2
3rd dark fringe m = -3
a
EXAMPLE 7
EXAMPLE 7
EXAMPLE 8
EXAMPLE 8
EXAMPLE 9
EXAMPLE 9
EXAMPLE 10
Coherent light that contains two wavelengths 670 nm (red) and 470 nm
(blue) passes through two parallel slits separated by 0.60 mm. The
interference pattern is observed on a screen 90.0 cm from the slits. In
the resulting interference pattern, find the distance between the 3rd
bright fringe above the central bright fringe for red and the 3rd dark
fringe below the central bright fringe for blue.
3rd DF below
y3DFblue R
m 12
0.900m
(2.5)(470nm)
1.76 mm
CBF for blue:
d 0.60mm
mD mI mI d
x R
mD a ymD ymI
a d
d 0.36mm
mI mD (1) 3 cbf cbf
a 0.12mm
The 3rd order bright fringe is missing
from the pattern. 1st missing
1st dark bright
fringe fringe
(3)(670nm)
(b) ymI 1.20m 6.7 mm
0.36mm