Physics 4 Diffraction Prepared by Vince Zaccone For Campus Learning Assistance Services at UCSB.

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Presentation transcript:

Physics 4 Diffraction Prepared by Vince Zaccone For Campus Learning Assistance Services at UCSB

Prepared by Vince Zaccone For Campus Learning Assistance Services at UCSB Diffraction When light encounters an obstacle it will exhibit diffraction effects as the light bends around the object or passes through a narrow opening. Notice the alternating bright and dark bands around the edge of the razor blade. This is due to constructive and destructive interference of the light waves.

Single Slit Diffraction Similar to the double-slit experiment. The formulas are opposite (the geometry just comes out that way). Notice that the central maximum is double-width compared to the others. This is how you can tell a single-slit pattern from a multiple-slit pattern. Prepared by Vince Zaccone For Campus Learning Assistance Services at UCSB Formulas for Constructive Interference (bright fringes) Formulas for Destructive Interference (dark fringes) These approximate formulas work when the angle is small

Here’s a sample problem: How many dark fringes will be produced on either side of the central maximum if green light (λ=553nm) is incident on a slit that is 2µm wide? Prepared by Vince Zaccone For Campus Learning Assistance Services at UCSB

Here’s a sample problem: How many dark fringes will be produced on either side of the central maximum if green light (λ=553nm) is incident on a slit that is 2µm wide? This is a single-slit problem, so the formula for the dark fringes is: Prepared by Vince Zaccone For Campus Learning Assistance Services at UCSB

Here’s a sample problem: How many dark fringes will be produced on either side of the central maximum if green light (λ=553nm) is incident on a slit that is 2µm wide? Let’s find the angles to the first few dark fringes. We get a new angle for each value of m. mθ 116° 234° 356° 4??? Prepared by Vince Zaccone For Campus Learning Assistance Services at UCSB This is a single-slit problem, so the formula for the dark fringes is: When we try to calculate with m=4 we get a calculator error. Why doesn’t it work?

Here’s a sample problem: How many dark fringes will be produced on either side of the central maximum if green light (λ=553nm) is incident on a slit that is 2µm wide? Let’s find the angles to the first few dark fringes. We get a new angle for each value of m. Recall the single-slit diffraction diagram. For the fringes to show up on the screen, the angle must be less than 90°. Of course the pattern gets very dim near the edges, but mathematically the formula will break down when sin(θ)>1. Prepared by Vince Zaccone For Campus Learning Assistance Services at UCSB This is a single-slit problem, so the formula for the dark fringes is: R mθ 116° 234° 356° 4??? When we try to calculate with m=4 we get a calculator error. Why doesn’t it work?

Here’s a sample problem: How many dark fringes will be produced on either side of the central maximum if green light (λ=553nm) is incident on a slit that is 2µm wide? Let’s find the angles to the first few dark fringes. We get a new angle for each value of m. Recall the single-slit diffraction diagram. For the fringes to show up on the screen, the angle must be less than 90°. Of course the pattern gets very dim near the edges, but mathematically the formula will break down when sin(θ)>1. Prepared by Vince Zaccone For Campus Learning Assistance Services at UCSB This is a single-slit problem, so the formula for the dark fringes is: R mθ 116° 234° 356° 4??? When we try to calculate with m=4 we get a calculator error. Why doesn’t it work? So it looks like we will get 3 dark fringes.

Multiple Slits (diffraction gratings) These work just like the double slit experiment (same formula), but the bright spots are narrower, and the dark spots are wider. If the grating has more slits the result is a sharper image, with narrower bright fringes. Prepared by Vince Zaccone For Campus Learning Assistance Services at UCSB This formula gives the location of the intensity maxima for a multiple-slit setup

X-Ray Diffraction Prepared by Vince Zaccone For Campus Learning Assistance Services at UCSB When X-Rays pass through a crystal, the crystal behaves like a 3-dimensional diffraction grating, creating a corresponding diffraction pattern. Here is Bragg condition for the bright spots (constructive interference):

Circular Aperture Prepared by Vince Zaccone For Campus Learning Assistance Services at UCSB Light passing through a circular opening gives a circular pattern. A formula to find the first dark fringe is: This can be taken as the angular resolution of the aperture. When two light sources are close together this angle limits our ability to “resolve” them as separate objects.

Circular Aperture Prepared by Vince Zaccone For Campus Learning Assistance Services at UCSB Example: You are driving at night on a long straight highway in the desert as another vehicle approaches. What is the maximum distance at which you can tell that it is a car rather than a motorcycle by seeing its headlights, which are separated by a distance of 1.5m? a)Assume your visual acuity is limited only by diffraction. Use 550 nm for the wavelength, and pupil diameter 6.0mm. b)What answer do you get if you use a more realistic, typical visual acuity with θ min =5x10 -4 rad?