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المرحلة 2
أستاذ المادة محمد حمزة خضير المعموري
27/09/2019 15:20:36
More familiar types of waves are sound, or waves on a surface of water. In both cases, there is a perturbation with a periodic spatial pattern which propagates, or travels in space. In the case of sound waves in air for example, the perturbed quantity is the pressure, which oscillates about the mean atmospheric pressure. In the case of waves on a water surface, the perturbed quantity is simply the height of the surface, which oscillates about its stationary level. Figure 1.1 shows an example of a wave, captured at a certain instant in time. It is simpler to visualize a wave by drawing the “wave fronts”, which are usually taken to be the crests of the wave. In the case of Figure 1.1 the wave fronts are circular, as shown below the wave plot. 1.1.2 Evidence for wave properties of light There are certain things that only waves can do, for example interfere. Ripples in a pond caused by two pebbles dropped at the same time exhibit this nicely: Where two crests overlap, the waves reinforce each other, but where a crest and a trough coincide, the two waves actually cancel. This is illustrated in Figure 1.2. If light is a wave, two sources emitting waves in a synchronized fashion1 should produce a pattern of alternating bright and dark bands on a screen. Thomas Young tried the experiment in the early 1800’s, and found the expected pattern. The wave model of light has one serious drawback, though: Unlike other wave phenomena such as sound, or surface waves, it wasn’t clear what the medium was that supported light waves. Giving it a name – the “luminiferous aether” – didn’t help. James Clerk Maxwell’s (1831 - 1879) theory of electromagnetism, however, showed that light was a wave in combined electric and magnetic fields, which, being force fields, didn’t need a material medium. 1When two sources of waves oscillate in step with each other, they are said to be coherent. We will return to this when we study interference phenomena in greater detail. 1.2. FEATURES OF A WAVE 3 1.1.3 Evidence for light as a stream of particles One of the earliest proponents of the idea that light was a stream of particles was Isaac Newton himself. Although Young’s findings and others seemed to disprove that theory entirely, surprisingly other experimental evidence appeared at the turn of the 20th. century which could only be explained by the particle model of light! The photoelectric effect, where light striking a metal dislodges electrons from the metal atoms which can then flow as a current earned Einstein the Nobel prize for his explanation in terms of photons. We are forced to accept that both interpretations of the phenomenon of light are true, although they appear to be contradictory. One interpretation or the other will serve better in a particular context. For our purposes, in understanding how optical instruments work, the wave theory of light is entirely adequate. 1.2 Features of a wave We’ll consider the simple case of a sine wave in 1 dimension, as shown in Figure 1.3. The distance between successive wave fronts is the wavelength. As the wave propagates, let us assume in the positive x direction, any point on the wave pattern is displaced by dx in a time dt (see Figure 1.4). We can speak of the propagation speed of the wave v = dx dt (1.1) As the wave propagates, so do the wavefronts. A stationary observer in the path of the wave would see the perturbation oscillate in time, periodically in “cycles”. The duration of each cycle is the period of the wave, and the number of cycles measured by the observer each second is the frequency2. There is a simple relation between the wavelength , frequency f, and propagation speed v of a wave: v = f (1.2) Electromagnetic waves in vacuum always propagate with speed c = 3.0 × 108 m/s. In principle, electromagnetic waves may have any wavelength, from zero to arbitrarily long. Only a very narrow range of wavelengths, approximately 400 - 700 nm, are visible to the human eye. We perceive wavelength as colour; the longest visible wavelengths are red, and the shortest are violet. Longer
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