Young Double-Slit Experiment
- For two-source interference fringes to be observed, the sources of the wave must be:
- Coherent (constant phase difference)
- Monochromatic (single wavelength)
- When two waves interfere, the resultant wave depends on the phase difference between the two waves
- This is proportional to the path difference between the waves which can be written in terms of the wavelength λ of the wave
- As seen from the diagram, the wave from slit S2 has to travel slightly further than that from S1 to reach the same point on the screen
- The difference in this distance is the path difference
Path difference of constructive and destructive interference is determined by wavelength
- For constructive interference (or maxima), the difference in wavelengths will be an integer number of whole wavelengths
- For destructive interference (or minima) it will be an integer number of whole wavelengths plus a half wavelength
- n is the order of the maxima/minima since there is usually more than one of these produced by the interference pattern
- An example of the orders of maxima is shown below:
Interference pattern of light waves shown with orders of maxima
- n = 0 is taken from the middle, n = 1 is one either side and so on
Young's Double Slit Experiment
- Young’s double-slit experiment demonstrates how light waves can produce an interference pattern
- The setup of the experiment is shown below:
Young’s double-slit experiment arrangement
- When a monochromatic light source is placed behind a single slit, the light is diffracted producing two light sources at the double slits A and B
- Since both light sources originate from the same primary source, they are coherent and will therefore create an observable interference pattern
- Both diffracted light from the double slits create an interference pattern made up of bright and dark fringes
Wave Nature of Light
- Interference is a confirmation of the wave-nature of light
- Newton initially proposed that visible light is a stream of microscopic particles called corpuscles
- However, these corpuscles could not explain interference or diffraction effects, therefore, the view of light as a wave was adopted instead
- Not long after, Huygens came up with the original Wave Theory of Light to explain the phenomena of diffraction and refraction
- This theory describes light as a series of wavefronts on which every point is a source of waves that spread out and travel at the same speed as the source wave
- These are known as Huygens’ wavelets
Huygen's wavelets shown by two wavefronts AB and CD
Examiner Tip
The path difference is more specifically how much longer, or shorter, one path is than the other. In other words, the difference in the distances. Make sure not to confuse this with the distance between where the two paths begin