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GENERAL PHYSICS III
GENERAL PHYSICS III
Optics
&
Quantum Physics
What
What
does we learn in Gen. Phys. III?
does we learn in Gen. Phys. III?
Many physical phenomena of great practical interest to engineers,
chemists, biologists, physicists, etc. were not in Gen. Phys. I & II
Wave phenomena of light:
Interference: what happens when two or more waves overlap?
(Light passing through two slits give such kind of picture)
Interference!
Quantum Physics:
The development of experimental equiment and techniques
modern physics can go inside the microscopic world (atoms,
electrons, nucleus, etc.)
New principles, new laws for the microscopic (subatomic)
world were discoverved
• Diffraction: The image of an object is not
exact in fine details.
For example, the image of a
circular disk is diffused
Interference & diffraction can be
analyzed if we regard light as a wave
The basis concept: wave particle duality
Examples: light wave photon
electron electron wave etc…
• Subatomic objects obey new mechanics:
quantum mechanics
On the basis of quatum mechanics we study structure and
properties of atoms, nucleus, solids, laser rays, etc…
Chapter XVII
Chapter XVII
Interference of light
Interference of light
§1. Interference of coherent sources of light
§2. Interference in thin films
§3. Interferometer
§1. Interference of light from coherent sources:
We consider an overlap of light that comes from two sources.
A remarkable phenomen takes place, if two sources satisfy some
following conditions:
The sources are
monochromatic.
It means that they emit light
of a single color.
A monochromatic light corresponds to a
sinusoidal electromagnetic
wave
with a single frequency
f
and wave length
Two sources have the same frequency f (the same wave length )
Two souces are permanently
in phase
, or , at least, have any definite
constant phase difference
Then, two sources are called coherent sources.
1.1 Coherent sources of light:
Recall the formula for a sinusoidal e-m wave:
2
, cos cos 2 cos
speed amplitude
2
wavelength wavenumber or wavevector
frequency 2 angular frequency
y x t A x vt A kx ft A kx t
v A
k
f f
Notes:
Common sources of light do not emit monochromatic light
(single-frequency light)
→ However one can produce approximately monochromatic light:
• by using filters which block all but a very narrow range
of wave length
• by using light from a laser
1.2 Interference
1.2 Interference
of light through narrow
of light through narrow
slits:
slits:
Monochromatic
light source at a
great distance,
or a laser.
Slit pattern
Observation
screen
Young’s experiment on doubledouble slit interferenceslit interference
(Thomas Young performed in 1800)(Thomas Young performed in 1800)
Light (wavelength is incident on a two-slit (two narrow,
rectangular openings) apparatus:
If either one of the slits is closed, a
diffuse image of the other slit will appear
on the screen. (The image will be
“diffuse” due to diffraction. We will
discuss this effect in more detail
later.)
Monochromatic light
(wavelength )
S
1
S
2
screen
Diffraction
profile
I
1
If both slits are now open, we see
interference “fringes” (light and dark
bands), corresponding to constructive
and destructive interference of the
electric-field amplitudes from both
slits.
I
S
1
S
2
Dark fringes
Light fringes
Important quantity: path difference = r
2
- r
1
The light density at the location of observer depends on the
path difference
S
1
S
2
Observer
Light
d
r
1
r
2
A path difference corresponds to a phase difference of
two waves at the observer’s point
. GENERAL PHYSICS III
GENERAL PHYSICS III
Optics
&
Quantum Physics
What
What
does we learn in Gen. Phys. III?
does. such kind of picture)
Interference!
Quantum Physics:
The development of experimental equiment and techniques
modern physics can go inside the microscopic