chapter 3 Waves Flashcards

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1
Q

What is a wave?

A

A regular disturbance that carries energy from one place to another

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2
Q

What does a wave transport?

A

Energy, not matter

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3
Q

When a wave is present in a medium, what happens to the individual particles?

A

They are temporarily displaced from their rest position; there is always a force acting upon the particles that restores them to their original position

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4
Q

What are the two ways of showing wave motion in a graph?

A
  • displacement-time

* displacement-distance

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5
Q

What is displacement?

A

Instantaneous distance from the equilibrium (undisturbed) level

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6
Q

What is amplitude?

A

The maximum displacement from the equilibrium position

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7
Q

What is wavelength?

A

The distance between any two points on adjacent cycles which are vibrating in phase

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8
Q

What is the meaning of ‘in phase’?

A

At the same point in the cycle

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9
Q

What is time period?

A

The time taken for one complete cycle (oscillation/wave)

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10
Q

What is frequency?

A

The number of oscillations (or cycles) in one second

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11
Q

the equation for time period if found on the data sheet. what do the symbols stand for?

T= 1/f

A

T = 1/f T= time period f= frequency

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12
Q

the wave speed equation is found on the data sheet. what do the symbols stand for?

c =fλ

A

c =fλ

c= wave speed f=frequency λ=wavelength

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13
Q

Derivation of the wave equation?

A
  • speed = distance / time = wavelength / period
  • c = λ/T = λ/f⁻¹
  • c = λf
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14
Q

What is phase difference?

A

The difference between two waves having the same frequency and referenced to the same point in time

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15
Q

What is phase difference expressed in?

A

Degrees, radians or fractions of a cycle

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16
Q

Would two oscillators with the same frequency and different phases have a phase difference?

A

Yes - they would be out of phase with each other

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17
Q

What is the range of values for phase difference?

A
  • degrees - 0 to 360

* radians - 0 to 2π

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18
Q

What is antiphase?

A

When the phase difference is 180 degrees (π radians)

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19
Q

What is the equation for phase difference?

A
  • x/λ x 360 (degrees)

* x/λ x 2π (radians)

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20
Q

What are transverse waves?

A

When the displacement is at right angles to the direction of the wave

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21
Q

What are longitudinal waves?

A

When the displacement is parallel to the direction of the wave

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22
Q

What type of wave is light?

A

Transverse, electromagnetic

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23
Q

What type of wave is sound?

A

Longitudinal, mechanical

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24
Q

What are mechanical waves?

A

Waves that travel by vibrating particles in a medium

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25
Q

Can mechanical waves travel in a vacuum?

A

No

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26
Q

What are electromagnetic waves?

A

Waves that can travel through a vacuum

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27
Q

What is the speed of light in a vacuum?

A

3 x 10⁸ m/s

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28
Q

What happens when an electromagnetic wave hits a surface?

A

The wave can be reflected, transmitted or absorbed

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29
Q

What happens to an object when it absorbs an electromagnetic wave?

A

Its temperature increases

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30
Q

In what planes can the displacements of oscillations in transverse waves be?

A

In all planes

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31
Q

What are plane-polarised waves?

A

Have the oscillations in one plane only

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32
Q

How is light polarised?

A
  • by absorbing all planes of oscillation except one

* by reflection

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33
Q

What is Polaroid plastic formed from?

A

Many tiny crystals, all lined up

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34
Q

Which planes of oscillation does Polaroid plastic absorb?

A

All of them except the vertical one

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35
Q

When light is polarised by reflection, which way is the plane of polarisation?

A

Horizontal

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36
Q

What happens if you wear sunglasses made from Polaroid plastic and look at water?

A

Reflection off the water surface is absorbed, because its plane of polarisation is perpendicular to that of the Polaroid

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37
Q

Why do you not get dazzled by the reflected glare from water when wearing Polaroid sunglasses?

A

The plane of polarisation of the water is perpendicular to that of the Polaroid

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38
Q

What happens if two pieces of Polaroid are ‘crossed’ so that their transmission planes are at right angles?

A

No light will get through

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39
Q

How can transverse and longitudinal waves be distinguished?

A

Transverse waves can be polarised; longitudinal cannot

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40
Q

What are electromagnetic waves a combination of?

A

Electric and magnetic field waves produced by moving charges

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41
Q

What is polarisation used in?

A
  • sunglasses

* alignment of aerials for transmission and reception

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42
Q

When are waves superposed?

A

When two waves of the same type are in the same place at the same time

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43
Q

How is the resultant displacement at any point found when two waves are superposed?

A

By adding displacements of each separate wave

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44
Q

What is interference?

A

The adding together of waves

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45
Q

What is the principle of superposition?

A

At a point where two or more waves meet, the instantaneous displacement (amplitude) is the vector sum of the individual displacements due to each wave at that point

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46
Q

When will interference be constructive?

A

When waves are in phase and the same frequency

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47
Q

What must the path difference be for constructive interference?

A

nλ (where n is a whole number of wavelengths)

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48
Q

When will interference be destructive?

A

When waves are in antiphase and have the same frequency

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49
Q

What must the path difference be for destructive interference?

A

(1+n/2)λ i.e. an odd number of wavelengths

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50
Q

What does it mean when waves are phase linked?

A

The waves have a constant phase difference

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51
Q

When are superposed waves easier to ‘see’?

A
  • the waves are of similar amplitude (↑ contrast between maxima and minima)
  • the waves have similar frequencies - otherwise the interference patterns create change so fast that they are difficult to detect
  • the waves have a constant phase difference i.e. they are phase linked
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52
Q

Examples of coherent sources?

A
  • light produced by a laser
  • sound from two loudspeakers connected in parallel
  • light emerging from two apertures illuminated by the same source
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53
Q

What are coherent sources?

A

Sources that have synchronised phase changes, as well as same frequency and λ

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54
Q

What are nodes?

A

On stationary waves, points that are always at equilibrium and 0 oscillation

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55
Q

What are antinodes?

A

On stationary waves, points of maximum oscillation

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56
Q

On a stationary wave, what it the distance from one node to the next?

A

1/2 λ

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57
Q

How are stationary waves formed on a string?

A
  • vibrator moves up and down - sends travelling wave down cord
  • wave reflected at end, so 2 travelling waves overlap and interfere
  • has antinodes and nodes; distance between nodes = 1/2λ
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58
Q

What is the resonant frequency of a rubber band?

A

Where the band vibrates with large amplitude

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59
Q

Comparison of the frequencies of particles in stationary and travelling waves?

A
  • stationary - all particles (except nodes) have the same frequency
  • travelling - all particles have the same frequency
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60
Q

Comparison of the amplitudes of particles in stationary and travelling waves?

A
  • stationary - varies from 0 (nodes) to maximum (antinodes)

* travelling - same for all particles

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61
Q

When does resonance occur?

A

When the frequency driving the system matches the natural frequency of the system

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62
Q

Comparison of the phase difference between two particles in stationary and travelling waves?

A
  • stationary - mπ (m = no. of nodes between the two particles)
  • travelling - 2πx/λ (x = distance apart)
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63
Q

Comparison of the energy of particles in stationary and travelling waves?

A
  • stationary - energy stored and not transferred

* progressive - energy transferred

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64
Q

What is a stationary wave?

A

Where energy is stored rather than transmitted - formed when 2 coherent waves travelling in opposite directions interfere to produce nodes and antinodes

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65
Q

What can increase the pitch of a note on a guitar string?

A
  • ↑ tightness/tension
  • ↓ length of string
  • ↓ thickness of string
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66
Q

What does the 1st harmonic depend on?

A

1st harmonic frequency f depends on tension T in wire, its length l and its mass per unit length

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67
Q

The equation to calculate the frequency of the 1st harmonic is found on the data sheet. what do the symbols stand for?

f = 1/2l x √T/μ

A
f = 1/2l  x  √T/μ    
f= frequency 
l= length (m) 
T= tension (m)
μ= mass per unit length( kg per meter)
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68
Q

What happens when the air at one end of the a tube/pipe is caused to vibrate?

A

A longitudinal wave travels down the tube, and is reflected at the opposite end - forming a stationary wave

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69
Q

Where are the anti-nodes in an open pipe?

A

At both ends

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70
Q

Why are waves reflected at the ends of open pipes?

A

Air acts as a barrier outside

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71
Q

For the fundamental frequency in an open pipe, what is the pipe length?

A

λ/2

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72
Q

For an open pipe, which frequency is the first overtone?

A

2nd harmonic (2f₁)

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73
Q

What is the frequency for the second harmonic in an open pipe?

A

2f₁

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74
Q

For the second harmonic in an open pipe, what is the pipe length?

A

λ

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75
Q

What is the frequency for the third harmonic in an open pipe?

A

3f₁

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76
Q

For the third harmonic in an open pipe, what is the pipe length?

A

3λ/2

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77
Q

Which harmonics can be obtained from an open pipe?

A

All of them

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78
Q

At resonant frequencies in a closed pipe, where are the nodes and anti-nodes?

A

Node at closed end, anti-node at open end

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79
Q

Describe the amplitude of the particles in a closed pipe.

A

Amplitude ↓ gradually from the maximum at the open to zero at the closed end

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80
Q

For the fundamental frequency in a closed pipe, what is the pipe length?

A

λ/4

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81
Q

For a closed pipe, which frequency is the first overtone and what does it look like?

A

3rd harmonic (3f₁)

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82
Q

What is the frequency for the third harmonic in a closed pipe?

A

3f₁

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83
Q

For the third harmonic in a closed pipe, what is the pipe length?

A

3λ/4

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84
Q

For a closed pipe, which frequency is the second overtone?

A

5th harmonic (5f₁)

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85
Q

What is the frequency for the fifth harmonic in a closed pipe?

A

5f₁

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86
Q

For the fifth harmonic in a closed pipe, what is the pipe length?

A

5λ/4

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87
Q

Which harmonics can be obtained in a closed pipe?

A

Odd harmonics

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88
Q

Why are standing waves only produced at certain frequencies?

A

There needs to be a whole number of stationary wave loops fitting into the length of the string

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89
Q

What does the double slit interference pattern consist of?

A

Equidistant parallel fringes alternating between:

  • maxima (constructive interference)
  • minima (destructive interference)
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90
Q

What happens when waves are travelling in the same direction and overlap?

A

They interfere

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91
Q

What does it mean if two sources are coherent?

A

They emit identical waves which start in phase

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92
Q

How can light that is in phase be produced for the double slit experiment?

A
  • use 2 coherent sources

* use single source with double slits

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93
Q

What does it mean if two sources are coherent?

A

They have the same frequency, wavelength and synchronised phase changes

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94
Q

The equation for the double slit interference pattern is found on the data sheet. what do the symbols stand for?

w = λD / s

A

w = λD / s

w= fringe spacing (m)
λ= wavelength (m)
D= slit to screen distance (m) (capital d is always the bigger distance)
s=spacing between slits (m)

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95
Q

For small angles, what does sinθ equal?

A

θ

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96
Q

If all types of wave interfere, why can’t we see interference patterns?

A

To obtain a clear interference pattern it requires two coherent waves of monochromatic light- light is usually emitted in bursts of waves, after which is a random phase change

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97
Q

How is light usually emitted?

A

In bursts of waves, each burst lasting 10⁻⁹s, after which there’s a random phase change

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98
Q

What is a monochromatic source?

A

A source of a single wavelength

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99
Q

What is usually used as a monochromatic light source?

A

A sodium lamp

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100
Q

Is there interference when two separate light sources are used?

A

Never

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101
Q

What is fringe separation?

A

The distance between neighbouring bright fringes

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102
Q

What happens to the double slit interference pattern if green light is used instead of red?

A

Wavelength is decreased so distance between adjacent fringes decreases

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103
Q

What happens to the double slit interference pattern if white light is used?

A

The central fringe is white, with red edges. Other fringes will be spectra with the blue end towards the middle of the overlap area

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104
Q

What happens to the double slit interference pattern if the screen is moved further away?

A

D↑ so distance between adjacent fringes increases

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105
Q

What happens to the double slit interference pattern if the phase difference between 2 sources is changed to 180°?

A

The maxima will become minima and vice versa

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106
Q

What happens to the double slit interference pattern if both slits are made narrower?

A

Wider interference so there are more dots, but fainter as there is less light through (x ↑)

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107
Q

What happens to the double slit interference pattern if one slit is narrower than the other?

A

The waves don’t fully cancel out

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108
Q

How can you increase x in the young’s slits experiment?

A
  • ↑ D - measurement easier and more accurate but fringe intensity decreased
  • ↓ a - practical limit to this
  • ↑ wavelength
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109
Q

Can mechanical waves interfere?

A

Yes

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110
Q

What is diffraction?

A

When a wave passes through a gap and spreads out

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111
Q

What happens to diffraction when the gap width ↓?

A

Diffraction ↑

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112
Q

When is diffraction strongest?

A

When the gap with is similar to the wavelength of the wave

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113
Q

Why do waves passing through a single gap interfere?

A
  • only 1 slit but more than 1 wave
  • single slit can be thought of as large no. of sources next to each other
  • each ‘source’ produces coherent wave - overlap and interfere
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114
Q

What happens, when light is shone on a diffraction grating, when the wavelength is increased?

A
  • short λ (e.g. blue light) - narrow diffraction pattern

* long λ (e.g. red light) - broad diffraction pattern

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115
Q

What happens when white light is shone on the diffraction grating instead of monochromatic?

A
  • white light yields less clear patterns (as position of dark bands depends on λ)
  • colours appear; only central band is white
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116
Q

Difference between single and double slit pattern?

A
  • single slit - central max. fringe that is twice the width of the other fringes
  • double slit pattern has equally spaced fringes
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117
Q

How many slits are on a diffraction grating?

A

1000s

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118
Q

Which method produces a better diffraction pattern?

A

Diffraction grating - as not much light gets through the double slits so are dim and unclear

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119
Q

What is a diffraction grating?

A

A set of slits for light waves to pass through

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120
Q

How do you calculate the number of slits per meter on a diffraction grating?

A

m = 1/d

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121
Q

the Diffraction grating equation is found on the data sheet. what do the symbols stand for?

dsinθ = nλ

A
dsinθ = nλ 
d= slit seperation (m)
theta= angle 
n= order of maxima 
λ= wavelength (m)
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122
Q

In the diffraction grating equation, what is the significance of sinθ never being greater than one?

A

There is a limit to the number of spectra that be obtained

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123
Q

What is the zero-order maximum?

A

The waves that produce the bright spot straight on - paths are all the same length, so phase difference is zero

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124
Q

What is the equation for the maximum number of orders?

A

n = d/λ

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125
Q

Why is sinθ not present in the equation for the maximum number of orders?

A

It will give a maximum when sinθ=1, so cancels out

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126
Q

When using the equation n=d/λ, which quantity must be a whole number?

A

n

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127
Q

Which is more accurate, the diffraction grating or the double slit method?

A

Diffraction grating

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128
Q

Why is the diffraction grating more accurate than the double slits?

A
  • double slits - fringes formed are slightly blurred → large errors
  • diffraction grating - images are clear and measurements accurate, also final result is an average of several calculations
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129
Q

What can diffraction gratings be used for?

A

Analysis of spectra

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130
Q

What is an optical fibre?

A

A long, thin, cylindrical core of glass, encased in a cladding of glass of lower refractive index

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131
Q

What is refraction?

A

A change in the direction of light as it passes across a boundary between two transparent substances

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132
Q

What happens, in terms of refraction, if light passes across a boundary at 90° to a surface?

A

It doesn’t refract

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133
Q

What is a refractive index?

A

A measure of the optical density of a material relative to air

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134
Q

What is the approximate refractive index of air?

A

1

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135
Q

the equationccfor the ‘refractive index of a material’ is found on the data sheet. What does each letter stand for in the equation n=c/v?

A

n=c/v

n = refractive index

c = velocity of light in vacuum

v = velocity of light in the medium

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136
Q

What is the word definition of Snell’s law?

A

The ratio of the sines of the angles of incidence and refraction are constant when it passes between two given media

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137
Q

what do the symbols stand for?

n₁sinθ₁ = n₂sinθ₂

A

n₁sinθ₁ = n₂sinθ₂
n= refractive index
theta= angle

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138
Q

What are the two conditions for total internal reflection?

A
  • light passes from more to less dense medium

* angle of incidence > critical angle

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139
Q

What is total internal reflection?

A

When light passes from a more to less dense medium, and the angle of incidence > critical angle, all light is reflected back to the less dense medium

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140
Q

What is the critical angle?

A

The limiting angle of incidence, as the angle of refraction cannot exceed 90°

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141
Q

What is the angle of refraction when the angle of incidence is equal to the critical angle?

A

90°

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142
Q

the critcal angle formula is given on the data sheet. what do the symbols stand for?

sinx= n2/n1

A
sinx= n2/n1
x = critical angle 
n2= the material it diffracts into 
n1= the first material
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143
Q

How does light travel along an optical fibre?

A

By total internal reflection, only escaping when it reaches the other end

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144
Q

What is an endoscope?

A

A medical instrument that uses optical fibres to look inside the body

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145
Q

What do endoscopes consist of?

A
  • a coherent bundle of fibres (lens system)

* an incoherent bundle of fibres (light delivery system)

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146
Q

What happens if a fibre is bent too tightly?

A

Angle of incidence will be less than critical angle and light will escape

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147
Q

What can endoscopes be used to look at?

A

Digestive, respiratory and female reproductive systems

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148
Q

What are the positives of endoscopes?

A

Can diagnose patients without an incision, often without anesthetic

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149
Q

In an optical fibre, when will total internal reflection occur?

A

As long as θ is larger than the critical angle

i.e. sin θ > n of cladding ÷ n of core

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150
Q

In medicine, what are the uses of optical fibres?

A
  • endoscopes

* lasers - burn tissue to heal wound

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151
Q

What is a coherent bundle of fibres?

A

Where the fibres stay in the same relative position along their length

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152
Q

What are some of the problems for optical fibres?

A
  • scratches can cause light to leak
  • two fibres touching can cause light to pass from one to the other - ‘cross talk’
  • dispersion
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153
Q

How can scratches and cross talk be resolved when using optical fibres?

A

Using cladding

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154
Q

Does cladding have a lower or higher refractive index than the core?

A

Lower

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155
Q

How is light sent down an optical fibre?

A

In ‘pulses’ or ‘bursts’

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156
Q

How can a pulse be distorted in an optical fibre?

A

• absorption - some energy absorbed so pulse has lower amplitude.

• dispersion - causes pulse broadening. 2 types:
modal- light enters at different angles and hence takes a different path.
material- light travels at different speeds.solved by using monochromatic light.

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157
Q

What are the two types of dispersion?

A
  • material (chromatic) dispersion - light kaing different paths
  • modal (multipath) dispersion- light being different speeds
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158
Q

How does multipath dispersion occur?

A

A pulse can take a variety of different paths through a fibre, meaning a single pulse can spread out over time

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159
Q

How can multipath dispersion be decreased?

A
  • use monomode fibres with a core diameter of only a few wavelengths, so light travels via one path
  • cladding
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160
Q

How can cladding help to reduce multipath dispersion?

A

Refractive index of cladding is only slightly lower than the refractive index of the core, so the critical angle is larger than is would be at a glass-air boundary → only small range of angles that can be transmitted

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161
Q

What is the diameter of a typical mono-mode fibre?

A

10 micrometers (1-10 x 10⁻⁶ m)

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162
Q

How can material dispersion be reduced?

A

Using monochromatic light (red will travel faster than blue)

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163
Q

What colour of light should be used in an optical fibre?

A

Red - it travels faster

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164
Q

What is it called when in a prism, white light is split into a spectrum of colours?

A

Dispersion

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165
Q

In a prism, what colour light is refracted more: red or blue?

A

Blue

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166
Q

Why is blue refracted more than red in a prism?

A

Blue light travels more slowly in glass than red light

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167
Q

When is pulse distortion more of a problem?

A

When the pulses are very short and close together

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168
Q

When are single fibres used?

A

In communications

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169
Q

When are bundles of fibres used?

A

In endoscopes

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170
Q

what is pitch?

A

Pitch is a term used to describe how high or low a note seems to be.
The pitch of a note depends on the frequency.

A high frequency produces a high pitched note and a low frequency produces a low pitched note.

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171
Q

what is a beat pattern?

A

A beat pattern is a wave whose amplitude is changing at a regular rate. Observe that the beat pattern (drawn in green) repeatedly oscillates from zero amplitude to a large amplitude, back to zero amplitude throughout the pattern.

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172
Q

how to derive the ‘dsinΘ =nλ’ equation?

A

‘dsinΘ =nλ’ equation?

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173
Q

<p>What is a wave?</p>

A

<p>The oscillation of particles or fields.</p>

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174
Q

<p>What is a progressive wave?</p>

A

<p>A wave that carries energy from place to place without transferring any material.</p>

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175
Q

<p>What is a wave cycle?</p>

A

<p>One complete vibration of a wave.</p>

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176
Q

<p>What is the displacement of a wave and what is the unit?</p>

A

<p>How far a point on the wave has moved from its undisturbed position. Unit: metres</p>

177
Q

<p>What is the amplitude of a wave and what is the unit?</p>

A

<p>The maximum magnitude of displacement. <br></br><br></br>/ distance from the undisturbed position to the crest or trough<br></br><br></br>Unit: metres</p>

178
Q

<p>What is the period of wave?</p>

A

<p>The time taken for a whole cycle (vibration) to pass a given point. Unit: seconds</p>

179
Q

<p>What is the wavelength of a wave and what is the unit?</p>

A

<p>The length of one whole wave cycle, from crest to crest or trough to trough. Unit: metres</p>

180
Q

<p>What is the frequency of a wave and what is the unit?</p>

A

<p>The number of cycles (vibrations) per second passing a given point. Unit: hertz</p>

181
Q

<p>What is the phase of a wave?</p>

A

<p>A measurement of the position a certain point along the wave cycle.</p>

182
Q

<p>What is the phase difference of a wave?</p>

A

<p>The amount one wave lags behind another.</p>

183
Q

<p>What are the units for phase and phase difference?</p>

A

<p>Angles (degrees or radians) or as fractions of a cycle.</p>

184
Q

<p>What are the symbols for displacement, amplitude, wavelength, period and frequency?</p>

A

<p>• Displacement - x<br></br>• Amplitude - A<br></br>• Wavelength - Lambda<br></br>• Period - T<br></br>• Frequency - f</p>

185
Q

<p>What is reflection?</p>

A

<p>When a wave is bounced back when it hits a boundary.</p>

186
Q

<p>What is refraction?</p>

A

<p>When a wave changes direction as it enters a different medium.</p>

187
Q

<p>What equation relates frequency and time period?</p>

A

<p>Frequency = 1 / Time period<br></br><br></br>f = 1 / T</p>

188
Q

<p>What is the wave equation?</p>

A

<p>Wave speed = Frequency x Wavelength <br></br><br></br>c = f x lambda</p>

189
Q

<p>What is c?</p>

A

<p>The speed of light in a vacuum - 3.0 x 10^8 m/s</p>

190
Q

<p>What is the equation for wave speed?</p>

A

<p>Wave speed = Distance travelled / Time taken<br></br><br></br>c = d / t</p>

191
Q

<p>What type of wave are EM waves?</p>

A

<p>Transverse</p>

192
Q

<p>Give some examples of transverse waves.</p>

A

<p>• EM Waves<br></br>• Water waves</p>

193
Q

<p>How do you measure the speed of sound with this setup?</p>

A

<p>Microphones = separate inputs so signals can be recorded separately.</p>

194
Q

<p>How can you measure the wave speed in water?</p>

A
195
Q

<p>What are the two types of graphs that can be drawn to show a transverse wave?</p>

A

<p>1) Displacement against distance along the path of a wave<br></br>2) Displacement against time for a POINT as the wave passes<br></br><br></br>(Note: 1 is just a standard graph of what a wave looks like. 2 is what happens to a specific point as a wave passes through it.)</p>

196
Q

<p>What does the distance between two crests/troughs represent on a displacement - distance graph?</p>

A

<p>Displacement - distance: Wavelength</p>

197
Q

<p>What does the distance between two crests/troughs represent on a displacement - time graph?</p>

A

<p>Displacement - time: Time period</p>

198
Q

<p>Electromagnetic waves travel as vibrations through...</p>

A

<p>... magnetic and electric fields.</p>

199
Q

<p>When looking at a graph representing a transverse wave, what must you look out for?</p>

A

<p>The label on the x axis. This may be distance or time, depending on what the graph is showing.</p>

200
Q

<p>Describe the vibrations on a transverse wave.</p>

A

<p>At right angles to the direction of energy transfer.</p>

201
Q

<p>Give some examples of a longitudinal wave.</p>

A

<p>• Sound<br></br>• Pressure</p>

202
Q

<p>What are the parts of a longitudinal wave?</p>

A

<p>• Compressions <br></br>• Rarefactions</p>

203
Q

<p>What are the anti-compressions in a longitudinal wave called?</p>

A

<p>Rarefactions</p>

204
Q
A
205
Q

<p>Do transverse and longitudinal waves require a medium?</p>

A

<p>• Transverse - Usually no<br></br>• Longitudinal - Usually yes</p>

206
Q

<p>How are longitudinal waves represented on a graph?</p>

A

<p>• Displacement against time. <br></br>• This can it look like a transverse wave!</p>

207
Q

<p>Describe the vibrations in a longitudinal wave.</p>

A

<p>Parallel to the direction of energy transfer.</p>

208
Q

<p>What is a polarised wave?</p>

A

<p>A wave that only oscillates in one direction (e.g. only up and down).</p>

209
Q

<p>Can transverse and longitudinal waves be polarised?</p>

A

<p>• Transverse - Yes<br></br>• Longitudinal - No</p>

210
Q

<p>Compare the vibrations in transverse and longitudinal waves.</p>

A

<p>• Transverse - Perpendicular to the direction of energy transfer. <br></br>• Longitudinal - Parallel to the direction of energy transfer.</p>

211
Q

<p>What is polarisation?</p>

A

<p>Causing a transverse to only vibrate in one direction (e.g. up and down) usually by passing it through a polarisation filter.</p>

212
Q

<p>What is some evidence for light being a transverse wave?</p>

A

<p>It can be polarised by reflection. A longitudinal wave could not do this, so light must be a transverse wave.</p>

213
Q

<p>What is polarisation evidence for?</p>

A

<p>Which waves are transverse. For example, light can be polarised, so it must be transverse.</p>

214
Q

<p>Why can light waves be polarised?</p>

A

<p>They are a mixture of different directions of vibration. This means that they can be polarised by allowing only some of these directions to pass through a filter.</p>

215
Q

<p>What is a polarising filter?</p>

A

<p>A panel that polarised waves by only allowing a specific direction of vibration to pass through.</p>

216
Q

<p>What happens in terms of polarisation when light is reflected off some surfaces?</p>

A

<p>It becomes partially polarised. This means some of it vibrates in the same direction.</p>

217
Q

<p>What happens when two polarising filters are arranged at right angles to each other?</p>

A

<p>No light will get through.</p>

218
Q

<p>What happens if the two filters aren't quite at right angles?<br></br>What is done to the filter to proves this?</p>

A

<p>It instead reduced the intensity of the light passing through it (but still allows some light through).<br></br>By rotating the filter we can see the change in intensity:</p>

219
Q

<p>Is most light we see polarised?</p>

A

<p>No - most light we see is unpolarised</p>

220
Q

<p>How does glare work?</p>

A

<p>Light reflected off some surfaces is partially polarised - some of it is made to vibrate in the same direction (Figure 9).<br></br><br></br>When light reflected off surfaces like water, glass or tarmac enters the eye, it can cause glare.</p>

221
Q

<p>How does glare reduction work?</p>

A

<p>The fact that reflected light is PARTIALLY-POLARISED allows us to filter some of it out with polarising filters.<br></br><br></br>If you view PARTIALLY-POLARISED reflected light through a polarising filter at the right angle, you can block out some of the reflected light, while still letting through light which VIBRATES at the angle of the filter.<br></br><br></br>This reduces the intensity of light entering your eye.</p>

222
Q

<p>What is the effect of reducing glare used for?</p>

A

<p>Reducing unwanted reflections in photography, and in polaroid sunglasses to reduce glare.</p>

223
Q

<p>What does the amount of polarisation depend on?</p>

A

<p>The angle of the incident light</p>

224
Q

<p>How do polaroid sunglasses work?</p>

A

<p>• Partially polarised light is reflected into a polarising filter at the correct angle.<br></br>• This blocks out unwanted glare.</p>

225
Q

<p>How do TV and radio signals make use of wave polarisation?</p>

A

<p>• Broadcasting aerial has rods, which emit polarised waves<br></br>• TV aerials on homes have horizontal rods<br></br>• These rods must be lined up in order to get maximum signal strength<br></br>• The same thing happens with radio aerials</p>

226
Q

<p>Give two examples of when wave polarisation is used.</p>

A

<p>• Polaroid sunglasses<br></br>• TV and radio signals</p>

227
Q

<p>What is superposition?</p>

A

<p>When two or more waves pass through each other and their displacements combine.</p>

228
Q

<p>What does the principle of superposition state?</p>

A

<p>When two or more waves cross, the resultant displacement equals the vector sum of the individual displacements.</p>

229
Q

<p>Graphically, how do you superimpose waves?</p>

A

<p>Add the individual displacements at each point along the x-axis and then plot these.</p>

230
Q

<p>What happens when a crest meets a crest (or a trough meets a trough) and what is this called?</p>

A

<p>• Constructive interference<br></br>• The amplitude of the wave is increased (i.e. the crest or trough gets bigger).</p>

231
Q

<p>What happens when a crest meets a trough of the same size and what is this called?</p>

A

<p>• Destructive interference <br></br>• The displacements cancel themselves out.</p>

232
Q

<p>What happens to these waves?<br></br>How do you work out the displacement of the combined wave?</p>

A

<p>Add the displacements of the two waves (=resultant)</p>

233
Q

<p>What does it mean when two points on a wave are "in phase"?</p>

A

<p>They are both at the same point in the wave cycle. They are likely to be 360*, 720*, etc. out of phase. They are the same wavelength and velocity</p>

234
Q

<p>What quantities are the same about points on a wave which are in phase?</p>

A

<p>• Same velocity<br></br>• Same displacement</p>

235
Q

<p>How many degrees is one complete wave cycle said to be?</p>

A

<p>360*</p>

236
Q

<p>How many radians is one complete wave cycle?</p>

A

<p>2π radians</p>

237
Q

<p>How many degrees is a radian?</p>

A

<p>180/π</p>

238
Q

<p>What is the SI unit for angle?</p>

A

<p>Radian -> 1 radian is equal to 180/π.</p>

239
Q

<p>How do you convert from degrees to radians?</p>

A

<p>Multiply by π/180.</p>

240
Q

<p>How do you convert from radians to degrees?</p>

A

<p>Multiply by 180/π.</p>

241
Q

<p>What is half a wavelength in degrees and radians?</p>

A

<p>• 180* <br></br>• π radians.</p>

242
Q

<p>What is 1/4 of a wavelength in degrees and radians?</p>

A

<p>• 90*<br></br>• 1/2 π radians</p>

243
Q

<p>What is 3/4 of a wavelength in degrees and radians?</p>

A

<p>• 270*<br></br>• 3/2 π radians</p>

244
Q

<p>What is a whole wavelength in degrees and radians?</p>

A

<p>• 360*<br></br>• 2π radians</p>

245
Q

<p>What is the phase difference of a vibrating particle?</p>

A

<p>The fraction of a cycle it has completed since the start of a cycle.</p>

246
Q

<p>What a the phase difference between two particles?</p>

A

<p>Thee fraction of a cycle between the vibrations of the particles, measured in either degrees or radians.<br></br><br></br>/ Difference in their positions in a wave's cycle</p>

247
Q

<p>What is the phase difference between two maximums in a diffraction pattern (for double slit in this case)</p>

A

<p>Distance between two maximums = phases difference of 1 wavelength</p>

248
Q

<p>What is the unit for phase difference?</p>

A

<p>Degrees or radians.</p>

249
Q

<p>Waves with a phase difference of 0* or a multiple of 360* are said to be...</p>

A

<p>... in phase.</p>

250
Q

<p>Waves with a phase difference of an odd number multiple of 180* are said to be...</p>

A

<p>... exactly out of phase.</p>

251
Q

<p>When are two sources said to be coherent?</p>

A

<p>When they have the same:<br></br>• Wavelength<br></br>• Frequency<br></br>And have a fixed phase difference between them.</p>

252
Q

<p>When are interference patterns most clear?</p>

A

<p>When the two sources are coherent (have the same wavelength and frequency and have a fixed phase difference between them).</p>

253
Q

<p>What is path difference and when is it relevant?</p>

A

<p>• How much further a wave has travelled compared to another<br></br>• This is used when looking at the type of interference between two waves that will occur at a certain point (see diagram pg 27 of revision guide).</p>

254
Q

<p>Assuming that two sources are coherent and in phase, at what path difference will constructive interference occur?</p>

A

<p>At a whole number of wavelengths.<br></br><br></br>Path difference = nλ</p>

255
Q

<p>Assuming that two sources are coherent and in phase, at what path difference will destructive interference occur?</p>

A

<p>At a whole number of wavelengths and a half.<br></br><br></br>Path difference = nλ + 0.5λ</p>

256
Q

<p>When are superposed waves easier to 'see'?</p>

A

<p>• the waves are of similar amplitude (↑ contrast between maxima and minima)
<br></br>
<br></br>• the waves have similar frequencies - otherwise the interference patterns create change so fast that they are difficult to detect
<br></br>
<br></br>• the waves have a constant phase difference i.e. they are phase linked</p>

257
Q

<p>Examples of coherent sources?</p>

A

<p>• light produced by a laser
<br></br>
<br></br>• sound from two loudspeakers connected in parallel
<br></br>
<br></br>• light emerging from two apertures illuminated by the same source</p>

258
Q

<p>What is a stationary wave?</p>

A

<p>The superposition of two progressive waves with the same frequency (wavelength) moving in opposite directions.</p>

259
Q

<p>What type of wave forms a stationary wave?</p>

A

<p>A progressive wave.</p>

260
Q

<p>Do stationary waves transmit energy?</p>

A

<p>No</p>

261
Q

<p>Describe how stationary waves in a string can be demonstrated.</p>

A

<p>• Vibration generator is attached to a piece of string at one end, while the string is fixed at the other end.<br></br>• The frequency of the generator is varied until a resonant frequency is found.</p>

262
Q

<p>Describe how the wave on a fixed piece of string (so it reflects at the end) changes with frequency.</p>

A

<p>• At most frequencies, the pattern on the string is a jumble<br></br>• If the vibration generator produces an exact number of waves in the time it takes a wave to get to the end and back, the original and reflected waves reinforce each other. This produces a stationary wave. - The overall pattern doesn't move along, it just vibrates up and down.</p>

263
Q

<p>When do stationasrty waves only occur?</p>

A

<p>Waves intefere with it's reflection.<br></br><br></br>Only happens at specific frequencies.<br></br><br></br>Nodes must occur at the point of return.</p>

264
Q

<p>What is a node on a stationary wave?</p>

A

<p>Where the amplitude of the vibration is zero.<br></br><br></br>Total destructive inteference</p>

265
Q

<p>What is an antinode on a stationary wave?</p>

A

<p>Where the maximum amplitude of the wave is.<br></br><br></br>constructive interence</p>

266
Q

<p>What are the sections of stationary wave on a string called?</p>

A

<p>Oscillating loops</p>

267
Q

<p>What is resonant frequency for stationary wave?</p>

A

<p>When an exact number of half wavelengths fit onto the string.</p>

268
Q

<p>What is it called when one, two and three loops of stationary wave are found on a string?</p>

A

<p>1 Loop = 1/2 wavelength = First harmonic<br></br>2 Loops = 1 wavelength = Second harmonic<br></br>3 Loops = 1.5 wavelengths = Third harmonic</p>

269
Q

<p>What is the first harmonic?</p>

A

<p>• When the stationary wave is vibrating at the lowest possible resonant frequency.<br></br>• One loop is on the string, with a node at each end.</p>

270
Q

<p>At the first harmonic, what is the length of the section of string?</p>

A

<p>1/2 a wavelength of the wave</p>

271
Q

<p>At the second harmonic, what is the length of the section of string?</p>

A

<p>1 wavelength<br></br>(when 2 half wavelengths (loops) fit on a string, the wavelength is the length of the string)</p>

272
Q

<p>At the third harmonic, what is the length of the section of string?</p>

A

<p>1.5 wavelengths</p>

273
Q

<p>What is added each time you have another harmonic?<br></br>How do you work this out?</p>

A

<p>an extra loop and an extra node, the number of wavelengths goes up by 1/2.<br></br><br></br><br></br>At the a^th harmonic the number of antinodes = a. number of nodes is a + 1.<br></br><br></br><br></br>At the a^th harmonic, a/2 wavelengths fit on the string</p>

274
Q

<p>How can you work out the frequency of the harmonic?</p>

A

<p>a x first harmonic frequnecy.<br></br><br></br>a = number of antinodes or the amount of harmonics or just the amount of bumps</p>

275
Q

<p>How many wavelengths are in the first harmonic for a closed tube?</p>

A

<p>Closed tube: the first harmonic has 1/4 wavelength.<br></br><br></br>(still increases by 1/2 a wavelength but the first harmonic starts at 1/4 wavlenghs)</p>

276
Q

<p>Closed tube: how many wavelengths are in the second harmonic</p>

A

<p>3/4 wavelengths (0.75)<br></br><br></br>(still increases by 1/2 a wavelngth but the first harmonic starts at 1/4 wavlenghs)</p>

277
Q

<p>Closed tube: how many wavelengths are in the third harmonic</p>

A

<p>5/4 wavelngths (1.25)<br></br><br></br>(still increases by 1/2 a wavelngth but the first harmonic starts at 1/4 wavlenghs)</p>

278
Q

<p>Closed tubes: what sound does a long wavelength create?</p>

A

<p>deep sound</p>

279
Q

<p>Open tubes: What does an open tube look like?</p>

A

<p>Antinode at entrance and exit, normal number of wavelngths in a harmonic (1st = 1/2, 2nd = 1, 3rd = 1.5)</p>

280
Q

<p>How do open and closed wavelengths compare?</p>

A

<p>Open tubes have more wavelength in the tube (in order to have an antinode at both ends).<br></br><br></br>This means they have a smaller wave in the same size tube.<br></br><br></br>When you hit a tube on a table with its 1 lid off, you get a deeper pitch than if it had both sides open and being hollow.<br></br><br></br>Watch TLPhysics video about closed and open tube harmonics.</p>

281
Q

<p>Remember to revise harmonic diagrams</p>

A

<p>Pg 28 of revision guide.</p>

282
Q

<p>How are stationary microwaves found?</p>

A

<p>• Microwaves beam reflected of a metal plate - the superposition of the wave and it's reflection produces a stationary wave.<br></br>• The nodes and antinodes are found by moving the probe between the transmitter and reflecting plate.<br></br>• The meter or loudspeaker receievs no signal at the nodes and maximum signal at the antinodes.</p>

283
Q

<p>Describe how sound can be used to demonstrate stationary waves.</p>

<p></p>

<p>How do you find the speed of sound from this?</p>

A

<ul><li>A loudspeaker produces sound waves in a glass tube</li><li>Glass tube with a speaker at the end is set up</li><li>Lycopodium powder is laid along the bottom of the tube</li><li>The powder is shaken away from the antinodes and left undisturbed at the nodes</li><li>Distance, d, between each pile of power (node) is <strong>λ </strong>/2. ( <strong>λ </strong>= 2d)</li><li>The speed of sound = c = f<strong>λ </strong>.</li><li>c=f<strong>λ</strong> is the same as c = f x 2d which is c = 2df</li><li>You can find the speed of sound by measring d and knowing the frequnency of the signal generator</li></ul>

284
Q

<p>Compare the frequency of the first, second and third harmonic.</p>

A

<p>• First = f<br></br>• Second = 2f<br></br>• Third = 3f</p>

285
Q

<p>Which equation can be used to find the frequency of the nth harmonic on a piece of string?</p>

A

<p>f = c / λ<br></br><br></br>Where:<br></br>f = Harmonic frequency<br></br>c = Speed of wave on string<br></br>λ = The wavelength of the wave given in terms of the length of the string (e.g. first harmonic: λ = 2L)</p>

286
Q

<p>In terms of wave speed and sting length, at what frequency is the first harmonic achieved?</p>

A

<p>f = c / 2L.</p>

<p>(½ wavlength = 1 length of string.</p>

<p>Therefore, 1 wavelngth = 2 lengths (2L))</p>

<p></p>

<p>When substituting L for wavelength, always start with “1 length of string = x wavelengths” then rearange to find 1 wavelength in terms of “lengths of string (L)"</p>

287
Q

<p>In terms of wave speed and sting length, at what frequency is the second harmonic achieved?</p>

A

<p>f = c / L</p>

<p>(1 wavlength = 1 length of string)</p>

288
Q

<p>In terms of wave speed and sting length, at what frequency is the third harmonic achieved?</p>

A

<p>f = 3c / 2L<br></br>Because</p>

<p>1.5 wavelngths = 1 length of string</p>

<p>1 wavelength = 1/1.5 = ⅔ lengths of string</p>

<p>f = c / (2/3 L)</p>

<p>rearange to get f = 3c / 2L</p>

<p></p>

<p></p>

289
Q

<p>What is the equation for phase difference in radians?</p>

A

<p>Phase difference (radians) = 2πd / λ<br></br><br></br>Where d = the distance apart of the particles in wavelengths (<strong>λ)</strong>.</p>

<p>(e.g. d might equal 1/4 λ if there is a quarter of a cycle difference)</p>

<p>Remember the period of a wave is 2<span>π</span></p>

<p></p>

290
Q

<p>Describe an experiment used to show how mass, length and tension change the resonant frequencies of a string.</p>

A

<p>1) Measure the mass and length of the string using a mass balance and ruler. Work out the mass per unit length (μ = M/L) in kg/m.<br></br>2) Set up the equipment as shown. This involves connecting a vibration generator (connected to a signal generator) to a piece of string attached to a pulley and some masses. Clamp the entire setup to the bench.<br></br>3) Measure the length (l) of the string between the vibration generator and the pulley. Work out the tension in the string using (T = mg) where m is the mass of the masses on the end of the string.<br></br>4) Turn on the signal generator and adjust the frequency until the first harmonic is found.</p>

<p></p>

<p>Depending on the experiment, you can chose to either change the mass (per unit length), the length or the tension; of the string</p>

<p>Chose one to change and keep the rest the same.</p>

<p></p>

291
Q

<p>What are the first, second, third, etc harmonics known as collectively?</p>

A

<p>The resonant frequencies.</p>

292
Q

<p>Which factors during the stationary wave experiment may affect the resonant frequencies?</p>

A

<p>• Length of the vibrating string - longer the string the lower the resonant frequency - because the half wavelength is longer (c = f<strong>λ</strong>, f increases for a fixed c)<br></br>• Tension in the string - waves travel more slowly if the string is loose and there is less tension (lower c = lower f)<br></br>• Type of string (different μ) - heavier string (more mass per unit length) - waves more slowly down the string (lower c = lower f)</p>

293
Q

<p>In the stationary wave experiment, what do the letters μ, Μ, L, T, m and g represent?</p>

A

<p>• μ = Mass per unit length of string<br></br>• Μ = Mass of the string<br></br>• L = Length of vibrating string<br></br>• T = Tension in the string<br></br>• m = Mass of the masses in the end of the string<br></br>• g = Gravitational field strength</p>

294
Q

<p>What is the unit for tension?</p>

A

<p>Newtons (N)</p>

295
Q

<p>Remember to revise the stationary waves experiment.</p>

A

<p>Pg 29 of revision guide.</p>

296
Q

<p>How can the length of the vibrating string in the stationary waves experiment be varied?</p>

A

<p>• Keep the type of string and tension the same <br></br>• Move the vibration transducer towards or away from the pulley</p>

297
Q

<p>How can the tension in the string in the stationary waves experiment be varied?</p>

A

<p>• Keep the string type and length the same<br></br>• Add or remove masses to vary tension</p>

298
Q

<p>How can the string type in the stationary waves experiment be varied?</p>

A

<p>• Keep the vibrating string length and tension the same<br></br>• Use different string samples to vary μ (different masses of string with the same length)</p>

299
Q

<p>How does string length affect the resonant frequency in the stationary wave experiment?</p>

A

<p>• The longer the string, the lower the resonant frequency.<br></br>• Because the half wavelength at the resonant frequency is longer.</p>

300
Q

<p>How does the type of string affect the the resonant frequency in the stationary wave experiment?</p>

A

<p>• The heavier (greater μ) the string, the lower the resonant frequency.<br></br>• Because waves travel more slowly down the string. A lower wave speed, c, makes a lower frequency, f.</p>

301
Q

<p>How does tension affect the the resonant frequency in the stationary wave experiment?</p>

A

<p>• The higher the tension, the higher the resonant frequency.<br></br>• Because waves travel more quickly on a taut string. A higher wave speed, c, makes a higher frequency.</p>

302
Q

<p>In the stationary wave experiment, what equation is used to give the FIRST harmonic frequency of a STRING?</p>

A

<p>f = (1 / 2l) x root(T / μ)<br></br><br></br>Where:<br></br>l = String length (m)<br></br>T = Tension in string<br></br>μ = Mass per unit length of string (kg/m)<br></br><br></br>See page 29 of revision guide.</p>

303
Q

<p>Remember to revise the equation for the first harmonic frequency in the stationary wave experiment.</p>

A

<p>Pg 29 of revision guide</p>

304
Q

<p>Now look at the other wave 8 - slits pack and come back and continue with this</p>

A

<p>do it - some of the next questions may be a repeat</p>

305
Q

<p>What is diffraction?</p>

A

<p>The spreading out of waves when passing through a gap (or going around an object).</p>

306
Q

<p>What determines the amount of diffraction observed?</p>

A

<p>The wavelength of the wave compared to the size of the gap.</p>

307
Q

<p>When is diffraction most noticeable?</p>

A

<p>When the gap is the same size as the wavelength.</p>

308
Q

<p>How does a narrower gap affect diffraction?</p>

A

<p>It is increased.</p>

309
Q

<p>How does a smaller wavelength affect diffraction?</p>

A

<p>It is decreased.</p>

310
Q

<p>What happens in terms of diffraction when the gap is a lot bigger than the wavelength?</p>

A

<p>Diffraction is unnoticeable.</p>

311
Q

<p>What happens in terms of diffraction when the gap is a lot smaller than the wavelength?</p>

A

<p>The waves are mostly just reflected back.</p>

312
Q

<p>When both are not in direct line of sight, why can sound be heard around a doorway, but light cannot be seen.</p>

A

<p>The doorway is a gap of a similar size to the wavelength of sound, so it diffracts to the listener. However, the gap is much larger than the wavelength of light, so the diffraction is not noticeable.</p>

313
Q

<p>In a single-slit white light diffraction pattern, what is the order of colours in each spectrum band and why?</p>

A

<p>• Blue is on the inner side, while red is on the outer side
<br></br>• This is because red light has a longer wavelength, so it diffracts more</p>

314
Q

<p>What happens to each fringe in a single-slit diffraction pattern as you move from the central maximum?</p>

A

<p>The fringes become less bright.</p>

315
Q

<p>What is intensity of light?</p>

A

<p>The power per unit area.</p>

316
Q

<p>In a single-slit diffraction pattern, how does the width of the central maximum compare to the outer fringes?</p>

A

<p>• It is twice as wide
<br></br>• The outer fringes are all of the same width</p>

317
Q

<p>Name two monochromatic light sources.</p>

A

<p>• Laser
<br></br>• Vapour lamps and discharge tubes</p>

318
Q

<p>Do two light sources have to be in phase to be coherent?</p>

A

<p>No, as long as they have a constant phase difference.</p>

319
Q

<p>What is the single-slit equation?</p>

A

<p>W = 2Dλ/a
<br></br>
<br></br>Where:
<br></br>• W - Width of the central maximum
<br></br>• D - Distance between the slit and screen
<br></br>• λ - Wavelength
<br></br>• a - Slit width
<br></br>(All units in m)</p>

320
Q

<p>Which of the wave equations is not given on the equation sheet?</p>

A

<p>Single-slit interference
<br></br>(W = 2Dλ/a)</p>

321
Q

<p>What is needed to demonstrate two-source interference?</p>

A

<p>Two coherent sources.</p>

322
Q

<p>Why are the 2 loudspeakers coherent sources of sound waves?</p>

A

<ul><li>They have the same frequency/wavelength AND constant phase difference.</li><li>This is achieved by both speakers being connected to same signal (generator)</li></ul>

<p></p>

<p></p>

323
Q

<p>Point A is at equal distances from P and Q. He then moves to point B.</p>

<p>A student moves from A to B and the amplitude of the sound wave he hears decreases and then increases. The amplitude starts to decrease again as he moves beyond B. Explain why the variation in amplitude occurs as he moves from A to B.</p>

A

<ul><li>The sound waves from the two speakers superpose (at a point) (not interfere)</li><li>At A (and B) the two waves are in phase (they have zero phase difference) and a maximum is produced.</li><li>Moving away from A introduces a path difference/phase difference = waves are out of phase (and amplitude decreases)</li><li>Minima's are formed when there is destructive interference (odd number of half wavelength = path difference or π/ 180 degrees = phase difference or antiphase)</li><li>(Moving on towards B the waves move back in phase)</li></ul>

324
Q

<ul><li>separation of the two loudspeakers = 0.30m</li><li>distance OA = 2.25 m</li><li>distance from A to B = 0.95 m</li><li>Show that the path difference for the sound waves from the two loudspeakers to point B is about 0.1 m.</li></ul>

A
325
Q

<p>The frequency of the sound wave is 2960 Hz. Calculate the speed of sound from the student’s data.</p>

<p>(remember path difference = 0.12 meters)</p>

A

<p>Path difference between two maxima's = 1 wavelength.</p>

<p>1 path difference = 0.12 m</p>

<p>1 wavelength = 0.12 m</p>

<p>0.12 x 2960 = 360m/s</p>

<p></p>

326
Q
A

<ul><li>As frequency increases, so does wavelength.</li><li>Therefore, the separation of maxima's (along the line AB) increases</li><li>Maximum moves (from B) towards C so amplitude of sound gets larger/louder (then quieter). OR Maximum moves further along path/beyond C so amplitude of sound gets quieter.</li></ul>

<p></p>

327
Q

<p>How can you ensure that two sources are coherent when demonstrating two-source interference with water or sound?</p>

A

<p>Connect both dippers/loudspeakers to the same vibrator/oscillator.</p>

328
Q

<p>How can you show this (picture) with an experiment?</p>

A

<p>Use two microwave transmitter cones attached to the same signal generator.</p>

<p>Use a microwave receiver probe - you get an alternating pattern of strong and weak signals.</p>

329
Q

<p>What is another name for the experiment to demonstrate two source interference?</p>

A

<p>Young's double-slit experiment</p>

330
Q

<p>In Young's double slit experiment, what do the slits act as?</p>

A

<p>Two coherent sources of light</p>

331
Q

<p>Can a white light source be a coherent source?</p>

A

<p>No, due to the various frequencies of light in it.</p>

332
Q

<p>Remember to revise the set up for Young's double slit experiment.</p>

A

<p>Pg 32 of revision guide.</p>

333
Q

<p>How can you demonstrate young's double slit experiment?</p>

<p>What are the safety precautions?</p>

A
334
Q

<p>How can you investigate the formula of young's double slit experiment with this set up?</p>

A
335
Q

<p>Why can the bands in the diffraction pattern only be called "fringes" in the double slit patter, not the single slit pattern?</p>

A

<p>Because they are all of the same width, unlike in the single slit pattern.</p>

336
Q

<p>What can be said about the phase difference at a bright fringe in the double slit interference pattern?</p>

A

<p>P.d. = nλ
<br></br>Where n is an integer.</p>

337
Q

<p>What can be said about the phase difference at a dark fringe in the double slit interference pattern?</p>

A

<p>P.d. = nλ + 0.5λ
<br></br>Where n is an integer.</p>

338
Q

<p>What is fringe separation?</p>

A

<p>The distance from the centre of a bright fringe to the centre of the next one.</p>

339
Q

<p>What is the danger of a powerful laser?</p>

A

<p>If you looked at the beam directly, your eye would focus it onto your retina, which would be permanently damaged.</p>

340
Q

<p>What are some safety precautions that must be taken when working with a laser?</p>

A

<p>1) Never shine the laser towards a person.
<br></br>2) Wear laser safety goggles.
<br></br>3) Avoid shining the beam at a reflective surface.
<br></br>4) Have a warning sign on display.
<br></br>5) Turn the laser off when it's not needed.</p>

341
Q

<p>How can Young's double slit experiment be adapted for microwaves?</p>

A

<p>• Replace the laser and slits with 2 microwave transmitter cones attached to the same signal generator
<br></br>• Replace the screen with a receiver probe
<br></br>• Move the probe along where the screen was and you'll get an alternating pattern of strong and weak signals</p>

342
Q

<p>What is the equation for Young's double-slit experiment?</p>

A

<p>w = λD/s
<br></br>
<br></br>Where:
<br></br>w = Fringe spacing
<br></br>λ = Wavelength
<br></br>D = Distance from slits to screen
<br></br>s = Slit separation</p>

343
Q

<p>In Young's double slit experiment, what is the easiest way to get an accurate reading for 'w'?</p>

A

<p>Measure several fringes and divide by the number of fringe widths between them.</p>

344
Q

<p>In Young's double slit experiment, what must you be careful of when measuring several fringes?</p>

A

<p>• When dividing to find 'w', remember to divide by the number of fringe WIDTHS between them, not the number of fringes.
<br></br>• e.g. 10 bright lines only have 9 fringe widths between them.</p>

345
Q

<p>Compare single and double slit diffraction patterns in terms of fringe widths and intensities.</p>

A

<p>Single slit:
<br></br>• Widest central maximum + equal outer fringes
<br></br>• Brightest central maximum + decreasing intensity of outer fringes
<br></br>Double slit:
<br></br>• All fringes of equal width
<br></br>• Decreasing intensity of outer fringes</p>

346
Q

<p>In a double slit interference pattern, why does the intensity of the fringes decrease as you get further away from the central maximum?</p>

A

<p>Because it's multiplied by the single slit diffraction pattern for either of the slits separately.</p>

347
Q

<p>Compare the double slit interference pattern for red and blue light.</p>

A

<p>The blue light creates a smaller fringe separation. This makes the pattern appear more compact.</p>

348
Q

<p>Describe and explain what is observed with double slit interference of WHITE light.</p>

A

<p>• White central fringe - Every colour contributes at the centre
<br></br>• Inner fringes tinged with blue on the inside and red on the outer side - Red fringes are more spaced out than blue fringes.
<br></br>• After a few fringes, no clear fringe pattern - The different colour's fringe patterns have all blended</p>

349
Q

<p>What was the importance of Young's double slit experiment?</p>

A

<p>• It was evidence for light interference and diffraction.
<br></br>• This was important in the debate between Newton's particle (corpuscle) theory of light and Huygen's wave theory of light.
<br></br>• It supported Huygen's theory (even though the debate was raging again 100 years later).</p>

350
Q

<p>Explain what happens when Young's double slit experiment is repeated with more slits.</p>

A

<p>• The same shaped pattern is observed, except the bright bands are brighter and the dark bands are darker
<br></br>• This gives a sharper pattern</p>

351
Q

<p>What makes the pattern so sharp when monochromatic light is passed through a diffraction grating?</p>

A

<p>There are many beams reinforcing the pattern.</p>

352
Q

<p>What is the advantage of observing sharper lines in interference patterns?</p>

A

<p>It allows for more accurate measurements.</p>

353
Q

<p>In double slit interference, what conditions must be met in order for a pattern to be seen?</p>

A

<p>• Each slit must be sufficiently narrow to diffract the light enough
<br></br>• The two slits must be close enough for the diffracted waves to overlap</p>

354
Q

<p>Explain simply why single-slit diffraction patterns are observed.</p>

A

<p>The waves from different points across the slit interfere to reinforce or cancel each other.
<br></br>(See pg 84 of textbook for a very good explanation!)</p>

355
Q

<p>Explain why a diffraction grating produces several sharp lines.</p>

A

<p>• Diffracted light waves from adjacent slits reinforce each other in certain directions only and cancel out in all other directions.
<br></br>• It works just like with double slit interference, except with many more slits.
<br></br>• More slits result in more sharp lines, so the are several distinct, sharp lines produced by a diffraction grating.</p>

356
Q

<p>What is the equation for distance between slits in a diffraction grating?</p>

A

<p>d sin θ = nλ</p>

357
Q

<p>How do you derive:</p>

<p>d sin θ = nλ?</p>

A
358
Q

<p>What must you be careful of when putting 'd' into the diffraction grating equation?</p>

A

<p>d is the slit spacing, not the number of slits per metre, which is how the data may be given.</p>

359
Q

<p>When given a grating with 300 slits per mm, what value of d is used?</p>

A

<p>• 300 slits/mm = 300,000 slits/m
<br></br>• Therefore, d = 1/300,000</p>

360
Q

<p>Remember to practise deriving the diffraction grating equation.</p>

A

<p>See pg 34 of revision guide + have a go.</p>

361
Q

<p>What effect does increasing wavelength have on the diffraction grating pattern?</p>

A

<p>It is more spread out.</p>

362
Q

<p>What effect does increasing slit separation have on the diffraction grating pattern?</p>

A

<p>It is more compact.</p>

363
Q

<p>When calculating the maximum order for a certain diffraction grating and a certain wavelength, what must you do to the value of n obtained?</p>

A

<p>Round it down to the next integer.</p>

364
Q

<p>How can you calculate the maximum order for a given diffraction grating and wavelength? Explain why this works.</p>

A

<p>• θ can never be greater than 90. Therefore, the greatest value that sinθ can have is sin(90), which is 1.
<br></br>• So, replace sinθ with 1 in the equation.
<br></br>• This leaves d = nλ. Solve for n.
<br></br>• Round n DOWN to the nearest integer.</p>

365
Q

<p>What is X-ray crystallography?</p>

A

<p>• The wavelength of x-rays is similar to the spacing between atoms in crystalline solids.
<br></br>• So x-rays directed at a thin crystal form a diffraction pattern -> The crystal acts like a diffraction grating.
<br></br>• Looking at the diffraction pattern, the spacing of the atoms can be calculated.</p>

366
Q

<p>What was x-ray crystallography used for?</p>

A

<p>To discover the structure of DNA.</p>

367
Q

<p>What is the *absolute* refractive index of a material?</p>

A

<p>• A measure of optical density
<br></br>• A ratio of the speed of light in a vacuum compared to the speed of light in the material.</p>

368
Q

<p>When does light travel the fastest?</p>

A

<p>In a vacuum.</p>

369
Q

<p>Why does light slow down in optically dense materials?</p>

A

<p>It interacts with the particles in the material.</p>

370
Q

<p>The more optically dense a material is, the more that light…..</p>

A

<p>slows down when entering it</p>

371
Q

<p>The optical density is measured by what?</p>

A

<p>its refractive index</p>

372
Q

<p>What does high optical density mean for it's refractive index?</p>

A

<p>Higher optical density = higher refractive index</p>

373
Q

<p>What symbol is used for the speed of light in a vacuum?</p>

A

<p>c</p>

374
Q

<p>What is ABSOLUTE refractive index?</p>

A

<p>the absolute refractive index of a material, n, is the ratio between the speed of light in a vaccuum, c, and the speed of light in that material cs (subscript s)</p>

375
Q

<p>What is the equation for absolute refractive index?</p>

A

<p>n = c/cs
<br></br>(NOTE: This is just a specific case of the equation for relative refractive index)</p>

376
Q

<p>What symbol is used for the speed of light in a material?</p>

A

<p>cs (subscript s)</p>

377
Q

<p>What is the symbol for absolute refractive index?</p>

A

<p>n</p>

378
Q

<p>The speed of light in air is only a bit smaller than the speed of light, c, so you can assume that nair =?</p>

A

<p>nair = 1</p>

379
Q

<p>What is *relative* refractive index?</p>

A

<p>The ratio of the speed of light in material 1 to the speed of light in material 2.</p>

380
Q

<p>What is the symbol for relative refractive index of a boundary?</p>

A

<p>1n2.</p>

<p>(it means the relative refractive index of a boundary, going from material 1 to material 2)</p>

381
Q

<p>What is the speed of light in a vacuum?</p>

A

<p>3.00 x 10^8 m/s</p>

382
Q

<p>What is the difference between absolute and relative refractive index?</p>

A

<p>• Absolute refractive index is the ratio of the speed of light in a vacuum compared to the speed of light in the material.
<br></br>• Relative refractive index is the ratio of the speed of light in material 1 to the speed of light in material 2.
<br></br>(NOTE: Absolute refractive index is just a case of the relative refractive index)</p>

383
Q

<p>What are the equations for relative refractive index?</p>

A

<p>1n2 = c1/c2
<br></br>or
<br></br>1n2 = n2/n1</p>

384
Q

<p>In the exam, you are given n = c/cs. Practise deriving the two equations for relative refractive index from this.</p>

A

<p>• n = c/cs<br></br>• 1n2 = c1/c2 (It's logical from the definition!)<br></br>•1n2 = n2/n1</p>

385
Q

<p>How many materials do absolute refractive index and relative refractive index refer to?</p>

A

<p>• Absolute - Property of one material only.
<br></br>• Relative - Property of the interface between two materials. It is different for every possible pair.</p>

386
Q

<p>What is the refractive index of air?</p>

A

<p>1</p>

387
Q

<p>In refractive calculations, how are air and vacuum perceived?</p>

A

<p>They are essentially the same since they both have a refractive index of about 1.</p>

388
Q

<p>What is the angle of incidence and what is the symbol?</p>

A

<p>The angle that incoming light makes to the normal.<br></br>Symbol: θ1</p>

389
Q

<p>What is the angle of refraction?</p>

A

<p>The angle that the refracted ray makes to the normal.<br></br>Symbol: θ2</p>

390
Q

<p>What must you be careful of when dealing with the angle of incidence and the angle of refraction?</p>

A

<p>They are measured from the NORMAL, not the boundary.</p>

391
Q

<p>Which was does light bend when it enters a more optically dense material?</p>

<p>From this, if n1 < n2, what can we say about θ1 and θ2</p>

A

<p>Towards the normal.</p>

392
Q

<p>Which was does light bend when it enters a less optically dense material?</p>

<p>From this, if n1 > n2, what can we say about θ1 and θ2</p>

A

<p>Away from the normal.</p>

<p></p>

393
Q

<p>What is Snell's law?</p>

A

<p>n1 x sinθ1 = n2 x sinθ2</p>

394
Q

<p>What is the critical angle?</p>

A

<p>The angle of incidence at which the angle of refraction is 90* so that the light is refracted along the boundary.</p>

395
Q

<p>What is the equation for the critical angle?</p>

A

<p>sinθc = n2/n1 = 1n2</p>

396
Q

<p>How do you get the critical angle?</p>

A
397
Q

<p>Derive the equation for the critical angle.</p>

A

<ul><li>In this case the angle of incidence is the critical angle: sinθ1 = sinθc</li><li>At the critical angle, the angle of refraction is 90*</li><li>So sinθ2 = sin90 = 1</li><li>Use snells law : n1 x sinθ1 = n2 xsinθ2 </li><li>n1 x sinθc = n2 x 1</li><li>sinθc = n2/n1</li></ul>

398
Q

<p>How can we find the refractive index of a material if the boundary is material to air and we have the critical angle?</p>

A
399
Q

<p>When drawing diagrams in semi-circle blocks, what is it important to remember?</p>

A

<p>There is partial reflection observed always, even when there is no total internal reflection.
<br></br>(See pg 73 of textbook)</p>

400
Q

<p>What is total internal reflection?</p>

A

<p>When light going from a more optically dense to a less optically dense material hits the boundary at an angle greater than the critical angle and is completely reflected.</p>

401
Q

<p>What are the conditions for total internal reflection?</p>

A

<p>1) Incident substance has a larger refractive index than the other substance
<br></br>2) Angle of incidence exceeds the critical angle</p>

402
Q

<p>What is an optical fibre?</p>

A

<p>A very thin flexible tube of glass or plastic fibre that can carry light signals over long distances using TIR</p>

403
Q

<p>Describe how an optical fibre works.</p>

A

<ul><li>Step index optical fibres used</li><li>The fibre has a very high refractive index (optically dense), but is surrounded by a cladding with a lower refractive index (less optically dense) -> This enables TIR + Protects the fibre.</li><li>The fibre is narrow -> Light always hits the boundary at an angle greater than the critical angle.</li><li>Light that enters at one end is totally internally reflected to the other end</li></ul>

<p></p>

404
Q

<p>Name some design features of an optical fibre.</p>

A

<p>• Thin -> Ensures light hits at angle above the critical angle + Prevents modal dispersion
<br></br>• Cladding of lower refractive index -> Protects the fibre from scratches + Ensures TIR happens</p>

405
Q

<p>What are the 2 reasons for cladding on an optical fibre?</p>

A

<p>• Protects the fibre from scratches
<br></br>• Ensures TIR happens (by having a lower refractive index)</p>

406
Q

<p>What are the 2 reasons for making an optical fibre thin?</p>

A

<p>• Ensures light hits at angle above the critical angle

| <br></br>• Prevents modal dispersion</p>

407
Q

<p>How does light get from 1 end of the fibre to the other?</p>

A
408
Q

<p>Name 2 uses of optical fibres.</p>

A

<p>• Endoscopes
<br></br>• Communications</p>

409
Q

<p>What are the benefits of optical fibres being used to transmit phone and cable TV signals (5)</p>

A

<ul><li>Light has high frequency = signal can carry lots of information</li><li>Light does'nt heat up the fibre = no energy is lost</li><li>No electrical interference</li><li>Fibre-optics are cheap to produce</li><li>Signal can travel very far, very quickly, with minimal signal loss.</li></ul>

410
Q

<p>What is signal degradation?</p>

A

<p>The disruption and changing of a signal as it passes through an optical fibre.</p>

411
Q

<p>What are the two ways in which a signal can be degraded?</p>

A

<p>• Absorption
<br></br>• Dispersion</p>

412
Q

<p>What is signal degradation by absorption and how does it affect the signal?</p>

A

<p>• Some of the signal's energy is lost through absorption by the material of the fibre.
<br></br>• This reduces the amplitude.</p>

413
Q

<p>What does dispertion cause?</p>

A

<p>Pulse broadening</p>

414
Q

<p>What is pulse broadening?</p>

A

<p>The recieved signal is boader than the initial signal. Broadened pulses can overlap each other, leading to information loss</p>

415
Q

<p>What are the two types of signal dispersion?</p>

A

<p>• Modal dispersion
<br></br>• Material dispersion</p>

416
Q

<p>What is modal dispersion and how does it affect the signal?</p>

A

<p>• Light rays enter the fibre at different angles and so take different paths -> Some arrive later than others. Rays taking a path straight down the middle of the fibre arrive faster than rays taking a longer path.<br></br>• This causes pulse broadening.</p>

417
Q

<p>What is material dispersion and how does it affect the signal?</p>

A

<ul><li>Caused by different amounts of refraction experienced by different wavelengths of light</li><li>Different wavelengths slow down by different amounts in the material so they travel at different speeds in the fibre -> Some arrive later than others.</li><li>This causes some parts of the signal to take a longer time to travel down the fibre than others.</li><li>This causes pulse broadening.</li></ul>

418
Q

<p>How can signal degradation by absorption be reduced?</p>

A

<p>• Use a highly transparent fibre to stop absorption.
<br></br>• Use an optical fibre repeater</p>

419
Q

<p>How can modal dispersion be reduced?</p>

A

<p>• Use a very narrow fibre -> Path difference is small.
<br></br>• Use a single-mode fibre -> Only allows light to take one path.
<br></br>• Use an optical fibre repeater</p>

420
Q

<p>How can material dispersion be reduced?</p>

A

<p>• Use monochromatic light
<br></br>• Use an optical fibre repeater</p>

421
Q

<p>What is an optical fibre repeater and what does it prevent?</p>

A

<p>• A device that boosts and regenerates the signal every so often
<br></br>• This reduces signal degradation by absorption and dispersion</p>

422
Q

<p>When signal dispersion is large, what can happen?</p>

A

<p>Broadened pulses can overlap, causing confusion and information loss</p>

423
Q

<p>How does a medical endoscope work?</p>

A

<p>• Has 2 bundles of fibres.
<br></br>• One is used to illuminate the area of the body.
<br></br>• A lens forms an image on the end of the other bundle
<br></br>• The fibres then take this image back to the other end, where it can be viewed.</p>

424
Q

<p>What is important about the bundle of fibre in an endoscope?</p>

A

<p>The bundle must be coherent, so that the image on the other end is not muddled up.</p>

425
Q

<p>In what planes can the displacements of oscillations in transverse waves be?</p>

A

<p>In all planes</p>

426
Q

<p>What is a coherent bundle of fibres in an endoscope?</p>

A

<p>When the fibre ends are in the same relative positions (i.e. the fibres arrange themselves in the same order to recreate the original image).</p>

427
Q

<p>What are plane-polarised waves?</p>

A

<p>Have the oscillations in one plane only</p>

428
Q

<p>How is light polarised?</p>

A

<p>• by absorbing all planes of oscillation except one
<br></br>
<br></br>• by reflection</p>

429
Q

<p>What is Polaroid plastic formed from?</p>

A

<p>Many tiny crystals, all lined up</p>

430
Q

<p>Which planes of oscillation does Polaroid plastic absorb?</p>

A

<p>All of them except the vertical one</p>

431
Q

<p>When light is polarised by reflection, which way is the plane of polarisation?</p>

A

<p>Horizontal</p>

432
Q

<p>What happens if you wear sunglasses made from Polaroid plastic and look at water?</p>

A

<p>Reflection off the water surface is absorbed, because its plane of polarisation is perpendicular to that of the Polaroid</p>

433
Q

<p>Why do you not get dazzled by the reflected glare from water when wearing Polaroid sunglasses?</p>

A

<p>The plane of polarisation of the water is perpendicular to that of the Polaroid</p>

434
Q

<p>What happens if two pieces of Polaroid are 'crossed' so that their transmission planes are at right angles?</p>

A

<p>No light will get through</p>

435
Q

<p>What is polarisation used in?</p>

A

<p>• sunglasses
<br></br>
<br></br>• alignment of aerials for transmission and reception</p>

436
Q

<p>What is the effect of reducing glare used for?</p>

A

<p></p>

437
Q

<p></p>

A

<p>5/4 wavelngths (1.25)<br></br><br></br>(still increases by 1/2 a wavelngth but the first harmonic starts at 1/4 wavlenghs)</p>

438
Q

<p>Open tubes:</p>

A

<p></p>

439
Q

<p>What is ABSOLUTE refractive index?</p>

A

<p>the absolute refractive index of a material, n, is the ratio between the speed of light in a vaccuum, c, and the speed of light in that material cs (subscript s)</p>