Title: Interference, Diffraction
1Interference, Diffraction Polarization
- PHY232
- Remco Zegers
- zegers_at_nscl.msu.edu
- Room W109 cyclotron building
- http//www.nscl.msu.edu/zegers/phy232.html
2light as waves
- so far, light has been treated as if it travels
in straight lines - ray diagrams
- refraction
- To describe many optical phenomena, we have to
treat light as waves. - Just like waves in water, or sound
- waves, light waves can interact
- and form interference patterns.
- remember cf?
3interference
constructive interference
destructive interference
at any point in time one can construct the total
amplitude by adding the individual components
4demo interference
Interference III
constructive interference waves in phase
5Interference in spherical waves
maximum of wave
minimum of wave
6(No Transcript)
7light as waves
it works the same as water and sound!
8double slit experiment
- the light from the two sources is
incoherent (fixed phase with respect to each
other - in this case, there is
- no phase shift between
- the two sources
- the two sources of light must have identical wave
lengths
9Youngs interference experiment
there is a path difference depending on its size
the waves coming from S1 or S2 are in or out of
phase
10Youngs interference experiment
If the difference in distance between the screen
and each of the two slits is such that the waves
are in phase, constructive interference occurs
bright spot difference in distance must be a
integer multiple of the wavelength dsin?m?,
m0,1,2,3 m0 zeroth order m1 first order
etc if the difference in distance is off by half
a wavelength (or one and a half etc),
destructive interference occurs
(dsin?m1/2?, m0,1,2,3)
path difference
demo
11distance between bright spots
tan?y/L
L
if ? is small, then sin????tan? so dsin?m?,
m0,1,2,3 converts to dy/Lm? difference
between maximum m and maximum m1 ym1-ym
(m1)?L/d-m?L/d ?L/d ymm?L/d
demo
12do loncapa 1,2,7 from set 9
13question
- two light sources are put at a distance d from a
screen. Each source produces light of the same
wavelength, but the sources are out of phase by
half a wavelength. On the screen exactly midway
between the two sources will occur - a) constructive interference
- b) destructive interference
1/2?
14question
- two narrow slits are illuminated by a laser with
a wavelength of 600 nm. the distance between the
two slits is 1 cm. a) At what angle from the beam
axis does the 3rd order maximum occur? b) If a
screen is put 5 meter away from the slits, what
is the distance between the 0th order and 3rd
order maximum?
15other ways of causing interference
equivalent to
n1gtn2
n1ltn2
1
2
2
1
16phase changes at boundaries
If a light ray travels from medium 1 to medium 2
with n1ltn2, the phase of the light ray will
change by 1/2?. This will not happen if n1gtn2.
n1gtn2
1
2
1
2
n1ltn2
1/2? phase change
no phase change
In a medium with index of refraction n, the
wavelength changes (relative to vacuum) to ?/n
17thin film interference
n1
The two reflected rays can interfere. To analyze
this system, 4 steps are needed
n1.5
n1
- Is there phase inversion at the top surface?
- Is there phase inversion at the bottom surface
- What are the conditions for constructive/destructi
ve interference? - what should the thickness d be for 3) to happen?
18thin film analysis
- top surface?
- bottom surface?
- conditions?
- d?
1
2
n1
n1.5
n1
- top surface n1ltn2 so phase inversion 1/2?
- bottom surface n1gtn2 so no phase inversion
- conditions
- constructive ray 1 and 2 must be in phase
- destructive ray 1 and 2 must be out of phase by
1/2? - if phase inversion would not take place at any of
the surfaces - constructive
- 2dm? (difference in path lengthinteger
number of wavelengths) - due to phase inversion at top surface
2d(m1/2)? - since the ray travels through film
2d(m1/2)?film (m1/2)?/nfilm - destructive 2dm?film m?/nfilm
19Note
The interference is different for light of
different wavelengths
20question
- Phase inversion will occur at
- top surface
- bottom surface
- top and bottom surface
- neither surface
na1
nb1.5
nc2
- constructive interference will occur if
- 2d(m1/2)?/nb
- 2dm?/nb
- 2d(m1/2)?/nc
- 2dm?/nc
note if destructive 2d(m1/2)?/nb this is used
e.g. on sunglasses to reduce reflections
21another case
1
2
The air gap in between the plates has varying
thickness. Ray 1 is not inverted (n1gtn2) Ray 2 is
inverted (n1ltn2) where the two glasses touch no
path length difference dark fringe. if
2t(m1/2)? constructive interference if 2tm?
destructive interference.
22question
Given h1x10-5 m 30 bright fringes are seen, with
a dark fringe at the left and the right. What is
the wavelength of the light?
23newtons rings
demo
spacing not equal
24loncapa
now do 3,4,5,8 from set 9
25question
- why is it not possible to produce an interference
pattern - in a double-slit experiment if the separation of
the slits - is less than the wavelength of the light used?
- the very narrow slits required would generate
different - wavelength, thereby washing out the
interference pattern - the two slits would not emit coherent light
- the fringes would be too close together
- in no direction could a path difference as large
as one wavelength be obtained
26diffraction
In Youngs experiment, two slits were used to
produce an interference pattern. However,
interference effects can already occur with a
single slit.
This is due to diffraction the capability of
light to be deflected by edges/small openings.
In fact, every point in the slit opening acts as
the source of a new wave front
27(No Transcript)
28interference pattern from a single slit
pick two points, 1 and 2, one in the top top half
of the slit, one in the bottom half of the
slit. Light from these two points
interferes destructively if ?x(a/2)sin??/2
so sin??/a we could also have divided up the
slit into 4 pieces ?x(a/4)sin??/2 so
sin?2?/a 6 pieces ?x(a/6)sin??/2 so
sin?3?/a Minima occur if sin?m?/a m1,2,3
In between the minima, are maxima
sin?(m1/2)?/a m1,2,3
AND
sin?0 or ?0
29slit width
a
a
if ?gta sin??/a gt 1 Not possible, so no patterns
if ?ltlta sin?m?/a is very small diffraction
hardly seen
?lta interference pattern is seen
30the diffraction pattern
The intensity is not uniform II0sin2(?)/?2
??a(sin?)/ ?
a
a
a
a
a
a
31question
light with a wavelength of 500 nm is used to
illuminate a slit of 5?m. At which angle is the
5th minimum in the diffraction pattern seen?
32diffraction from a single hair
instead of an slit, we can also use an
inverse image, for example a hair! demo
33double slit interference revisited
The total response from a double slit system is a
combination of two single-source slits, combined
with a diffraction pattern from each of the slit
due to diffraction
minima asin?m?, m1,2,3 maxima asin?(m1/2)?,
m1,2,3 and ?0 a width of
individual slit
due to 2-slit interference
maxima dsin?m?, m0,1,2,3 minima
dsin?(m1/2)?, m0,1,2,3 d distance between
two slits
34double-slit experiment
a
d
if ?gtd, each slit acts as a single source of
light and we get a more or less prefect
double-slit interference spectrum
if ?ltd the interference spectrum is folded with
the diffraction pattern.
35question
A person has a double slit plate. He measures the
distance between the two slits to be d1 mm. Next
he wants to determine the width of each slit by
investigating the interference pattern. He finds
that the 7th order interference maximum lines up
with the first diffraction minimum and thus
vanishes. What is the width of the slits?
36diffraction grating
consider a grating with many slits, each
separated by a distance d. Assume that for each
slit ?gtd. We saw that for 2 slits maxima appear
if dsin?m?, m0,1,2,3 This condition is not
changed for in the case of n slits.
d
diffraction gratings can be made by scratching
lines on glas and are often used to analyze light
instead of giving d, one usually gives the number
of slits per unit distance e.g. 300
lines/mm d1/(300 lines/mm)0.0033 mm
37separating colors
dsin?m?, m0,1,2,3 for maxima (same as for
double slit) so ?sin-1(m?/d) depends on ?, the
wavelength.
cds can act as a diffraction grating
38question
- If the interference conditions are the same when
using a double slit or a diffraction grating with
thousands of slits, what is the advantage of
using the grating to analyze light? - a) the more slits, the larger the separation
between maxima. - b) the more slits, the narrower each of the
bright spots and thus easier to see - c) the more slits, the more light reaches each
maximum and the maxima are brighter - d) there is no advantage
39question
An diffraction grating has 5000 lines per cm. The
angle between the central maximum and the fourth
order maximum is 47.20. What is the wavelength of
the light?
40lon-capa
do question 6 from lon-capa 9
41polarization
- We saw that light is really an electromagnetic
wave with electric and magnetic field vectors
oscillating perpendicular to each other. In
general, light is unpolarized, which means that
the E-field vector (and thus the B-field vector
as long as it is perpendicular to the E-field)
could point in any direction
E-vectors could point anywhere unpolarized
propagation into screen
42polarized light
- light can be linearly polarized, which means that
the E-field only oscillated in one direction (and
the B-field perpendicular to that) - The intensity of light is proportional to the
square of amplitude of the E-field. IEmax2
43How to polarize?
- absorption
- reflection
- scattering
44polarization by absorption
- certain material (such as polaroid used for
sunglasses) only transmit light along a certain
transmission axis. - because only a fraction of the light is
transmitted after passing through a polarizer the
intensity is reduced. - If unpolarized light passes through a polarizer,
the intensity is reduced by a factor of 2
45polarizers and intensity
polarization axis
direction of E-vector
For unpolarized light, on average, the
E-field has an angle of 450 with the
polarizer. II0cos2?I0cos2(45)I0/2
?
If E-field is parallel to polarization axis, all
light passes
If E-field makes an angle ? pol. axis only the
component parallel to the pol. axis passes
E0cos? So II0cos2?
46question
- unpolarized light with intensity I0 passes
through a linear polarizer. It then passes
through a second polarizer (the second polarizer
is usually called the analyzer) whose
transmission axis makes and angle of 300 with the
transmission axis of the first polarized. What is
the intensity of the light after the second
polarizer, in terms of the intensity of the
initial light?
47polarization by reflection
- If unpolarized light is reflected, than the
reflected light is partially polarized. - if the angle between the reflected ray and the
refracted ray is exactly 900 the reflected light
is completely polarized - the above condition is met if for the angle of
incidence the equation tan?n2/n1 - the angle ?tan-1(n2/n1) is called the Brewster
angle - the polarization of the reflected light is
(mostly) parallel to the surface of reflection
n1
n2
48question
- Because of reflection from sunlight of the glass
window, the curtain behind the glass is hard to
see. If I would wear polaroid sunglasses that
allow polarized light through, I would be able
to see the curtain much better. - a) horizontally
- b) vertically
49sunglasses
wearing sunglasses will help reducing glare
(reflection) from flat surfaces (highway/water)
without with sunglasses
50polarization by scattering
- certain molecules tend to polarize light when
struck by it since the electrons in the molecules
act as little antennas that can only oscillate in
a certain direction
51lon-capa
do problem 9 from set 9