Superposition Flashcards
State the principle of superposition
When two or more waves of the same type meet at a point, the resultant displacement is the algebraic sum of the individual displacements
Define
stationary wave
A wave pattern produced when two progressive waves of the same frequency travelling in opposite directions combine. It is characterised by nodes and antinodes. Also known as a standing wave.
In a stationary wave, what are nodes and anitnodes?
Nodes:
- a point on the wave with zero amplitude due to destructive superposition, i.e. at this point the waves always have a phase difference of 180o or π
Antinodes:
- a point vibrating with maximum amplitude due to constructive superposition, i.e. at this point the waves always meet in phase
Distance between 2 successive nodes / antinodes = λ / 2
Define
diffraction
The spreading of a wave when it passes through a gap or past the edge of an object.
For maximum diffraction to occur, the size of the gap should be equal to the wavelength of the wave.
Define
interference
The formation of points of cancellation and reinforcement where 2 coherent waves pass through each other
Define
coherence
Two sources are coherent when they emit waves with a constant phase diff erence.
Note: two waves can only have a constant phase difference if their frequency is the same and remains constant
List the conditions required if two-source interference fringes are to be observed
- Must be coherent/meet at a point
- Must be of the same type
- Must be polarised in the same plane or unpolarised
- For a well-defined interference pattern, should have the same amplitude