Two waves are perfectly superposed (traveling same direction), but are 90 degrees out of phase. Does this result in destructive or constructive interference, as the waves could be seen as either half anti-phase or half in-phase. For example, the first wave has an amplitude of 1. The second wave...
Homework Statement
Two square reflectors, each 1.00 cm on a side and of mass 4.00 g, are located at opposite ends of a thin, extremely light, 1.00-m rod that can rotate without friction and in a vacuum about an axle perpendicular to it through its center (the figure ). These reflectors are...
Homework Statement
A soap bubble is floating in the air. The wall of the bubble
has an index of refraction of n = 1.33. It is observed that red and
violet light are reflected from the surface of the bubble, but no
green light is reflected. Compute the minimum thickness of the
bubble...
Homework Statement
A glass-plate of 350 nm thickness is free standing in space. At the angle of 75 degrees, relative to the glass-plate plane, a white light point-source is placed. The diffraction (probably a typo, and should really be refraction) index of the glass is 1.33. On the same side...
This isn't homework. I just read another person's post and it jogged my head into having questions, so this is just for my curiosity.
Question 1:
Aside from the practical problem of finding a fuel source that travels the speed of light or faster...
Why is this a fundamental rule?
I really do...
Light waves, photons; sound waves, phonons; water waves, "hydrons"?
Light waves are made of photons; sound waves are made of phonons; so are water waves made of "hydrons", and if so, how would they behave, and would it be possible to make a water laser or something similar based on these particles.
A light wave has mass 0, so except his movement in one direction with lightspeed C it can't be moved in an other direction.
So the crossing is always the same point (don't consider that space itself is also expanding according theory). Consider you can still track the light waves after a...
Water waves are one half kinetic energy and one half potential energy. The quote below comes from the Wikipedia wave power article.
I assume that it is the same with light waves. Do people here agree?
"...E is the mean wave energy density per unit horizontal area (J/m2), the sum of...
Waves in general have three properties: frequency (related to wavelength), amplitude, and speed. When referring to light as a wave, it's wavelength and speed are always referenced but never its amplitude, and I was wondering if light has a fixed amplitude for all wavelengths or if it changes...
Homework Statement
We have two waves with functions:
E_1 = 6 \ sin (100 \pi t)
E_2 = 8 \ sin (100 \pi t + \frac{\pi}{2})
Find E_1 + E_2.
Homework Equations
\phi = \frac{2 \pi}{\lambda} \delta = \frac{2 \pi}{\lambda} d sin \theta
\frac{\delta}{\lambda}=\frac{\phi}{2 \pi}...
I am trying to learn about high-powered lasers. i am wondering what effects the actual power of the laser (the part that makes it burn). is it wave-length or frequency. Is gamma rays more destructive then visable light, ect. Any help would be greatly appreciated
I have a question about of light waves. Moving at high speeds toward or away from visible light could be the difference of experiencing that light as violet or red. Of course this experience is due to the photoreceptors in the eye seemingly experiencing a shorter or longer wavelength. My...
Expansion of spacetime stretches wavelengths and produces the red shift. Does it also stretch the amplitude of the wave, and make distant stars look brighter and therefor nearer?
So I'm on my last try for this question, and I could really use some help, I'm completely clueless..
Two waves of light in air, of wavelength λ = 460.0 nm, are initially in phase. They then travel through plastic layers as shown in Figure 35-36, with L1 = 4.00 µm, L2 = 3.50 µm, n1 = 1.20, and...
Homework Statement
Light of wavelength 500 nm illuminates a double slit, and the interference pattern is observed on the screen. At the position of the m = 2 bright fringe, how much farther is it to the farther slit than to the nearer slit?
Homework Equations
\delta=...
I'm in a math class reading Einstein's original paper "On the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies," from 1905.
I'm stuck in Section 8, "transformation of the energy of light rays." We're basically trying to show that that Placnk's constant is Lorentz invariant- if anyone has an easy way of...
We know that light travels through the vacuum of space because it is a self perpetuating system of electronic and magnetic waves.
Since this is the case, why do we not see the magnetic wave of light move magnets, or even make a magnet vibrate?
Is it simply because the magnitude of the...
Homework Statement
A laser beam ( λ = 694 nm) is incident on two slits 0.100 mm apart. Approximately how far apart (in m) will the bright interference fringes be on the screen 5.00 m from the double slits?
Homework Equations
y=L\left( \frac{m \lambda}{d} \right)
The Attempt at a...
I understand that there are multiple tests proving that electromagnetic waves carry energy through photons, but what causes the electrons to emit both waves and particles? I also don't understand how light is self propelling if anyone could explain that. I know it is related to the creation of...
So let's say for example there is a slide with two slits on it infront of a screen. A beam of electrons is aimed at it.
A) What would happen to the size of the fringes on the screen if I decreased the spacing between the slits
B) What would happen to the fringes if I moved the screen...
My notes says that this is due to how the wave patterns of both sets of light waves vary with time since the amplitudes vary due to electrons losing energy. But I don't get how this affects the coherence of both sets of light waves since they have the same frequency
Homework Statement
How do you derive the following equation given I/Io= (I/N2)[(sinNØ/2)/(sinØ/2)]2
given that Ø= (2πdsinΘ)/λ
Homework Equations
Ø= (2πdsinΘ)/λ
d=λ/sinΘ
The Attempt at a Solution
I have tried substituting Ø into the equation as well as d=λ/sinΘ, but I...
Homework Statement
Three light waves combine at a point where their electric field components are
E1 = Eo sin \omegat
E2 = Eo sin (\omegat - 2\pi/3)
E3 = Eo sin (\omegat + \pi/3)
Find the resultant amplitude of the electric field ER at that point and it's phase angle\beta
Write...
Homework Statement
The laser used in a typical DVD player has a wavelength λ = 650 nm and power of
240 mW.
(a) Look up the speed of light in empty space and calculate the frequency f of this laser light.
(b) Light of f carries energy in bundles of hf, called “photons”, where h is Planck’s...
does coherent LIGHT waves with a constant phase difference MUST have the same frequency?
what about LIGHT waves with the same frequency only? will it be not coherent??
So is this the ability for light waves to add up and subtract interms of interference? But I am confused as to what a non-coherent light sorce would be. I mean is it when the light waves are not organised enough? So there is no effect of interference through diffraction? or is it that there is...
just likes radios and such. i had a brief discussion with my math teacher on the subject, my math teacher was an electonical engineer at Bell Laboratories for 10 years, and i asked if its possible with radio, can't it be done with any light? He said yes. what i didnt ask him was, how exactly it...
This is purely a question I know little or nothing about light and the whole EM spectrum for that matter I was just wondering something. Why are visible light waves so puny compared to other frequencies on the EM spectrum. What I mean is that I can send a pulse to an antenna and emit let's say...
Ok so I've been thinking this problem over and over and I understand the problem and its concept but I just don't know where to start and how to do this, someone please guide me through this
Light waves of which wavelength will destructively interfere due to the thickness of the bubble film...
Homework Statement
Light passes through a 220 lines/mm grating and is observed on a 1.4m wide screen located 1.2m behind the grating. Three bright fringes are seen on both sides of the central maximum.
What are the minimum and maximum possible values of the wavelength?
Express your answers in...
I am a computer programmer attempting to represent light rays traveling through the air, bumping into things, reflecting and refracting in some manner as they go through glass or other material.
I have had good luck and the pictures look quite nice representing light photons as long skinny...
In a general physics class, one of the things we are studying is light waves. Optics is my biggest struggle within physics anyway, and now my book is explaining what happens when a laser is pointed through a barrier with holes on it. It includes some trigonometric formulas for...I don't even...
As I've been studying up on EM radiation, I've come to the conclusion that radio and light waves are not the same thing. Radio seems to be nothing other than a continuously flipping magnetic field (source: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aso/tryit/radio/radiowaves.html). In this way, there do not seem...
As a light wave enters from a material of lower refractive index (air, say) to a material of higher refractive index (glass, for example), the speed of the wave and its wavelength both decrease.
Let's say a light wave enters a pane of glass and then exits the other side of the glass, back...
Homework Statement
I just have a question; what's the main difference between light waves and mechanical waves? I know that light waves are transverse. I also know that water waves are transverse, but sound waves are longitudinal. I know that light has a dual nature, and travels in both wave...
Since the outer boundry(s) of our expanding universe are moving at a less than the speed of light rate there must be light waves generated in our universe that travel to the limits of our expanding universe and reach the "edge" of it. What takes place when they reach this edge? Can they "bust...
I am a sound tech and I no from my work there that if you have (in theory) two sound waves and 1 is 180 degrees out of phase with the other that they will cancel each other out. - This is mainly the basic theory of noise canceling headphones (along with some acoustic material, etc) and balanced...
1984 PHYSICS B WAVES
The surface of a glass plate (index of refraction n3 = 1.50) is coated with a transparent thin film (index of refraction n2 = 1.25). A beam of monochromatic light of wavelength 6.0 X 10-7 meter traveling in air (index of refraction n1 = 1.00) is incident normally on...
I cannot search the forum to check if this has been posted before, because I do not know what it is called in english...
That means that i have to try to explain what i means, here it goes: When a light producer, like a star is moving, it sends out waves that is either compressed or expanded...
Light Waves & Double-Slit Experiment Question...
Our professor gave us an extra credit question on our last quiz & every single student got it wrong, all 150 of us! Anyways, here is the question, if you know the answer that would be greatly appreciated. Here is the question:
Describe in as...
There must be another way to remove heat from electronic equipment rather than passing cool air over the surface? What about light waves? Can they cool a surface? Can they absorb heat, reflect away heat? Any one have any lateral thoughts?
Equations dealing with the interference of light waves have a variable 'delta y'. My biggest problem is understanding what 'y' represents? Does it define the distance between two adjacent fringes? Or the distance of a fringe from the origin? this scepticism might have been the reason for my...
Hello. I just have some questions about Young's Double-Slit experiment and light wave interference. I think i got the right answers, but i just want to know if i grasped the concept correctly.
1-If we perform young's double slit experiment under water, how would the interference pattern be...
Dear Friends and Phorum,
I need to know how to calculate the group velocity of light. I've read that's exactly "c", but I don't know how to calculate it.
"what is the frequency of red light in the air? What is the frequency of red light in the glass?"
is the frequency of a light wave length constant? therefore, the answer would be the same?