Waves Flashcards
Amplitude
A wave’s maximum displacement from its equilibrium position.
Antinode
A position of maximum displacement in a stationary wave.
Cladding
A protective layer on an optical fibre to improve the tensile strength of the fibre, prevent scratching, and prevent signal transfer between adjacent fibres.
Coherence
Waves are coherent if they have the same wavelength and frequency, as well as there being a fixed phase difference between them.
Diffraction Grating
A grating with hundreds of slits per millimetre, that results in sharper interference patterns. They are used to calculate atomic spacing and to analyse elements.
Diffraction
The spreading of waves as they pass through a gap of similar magnitude to their wavelength.
Electromagnetic Waves
Waves that consist of perpendicular electric and magnetic oscillations.
Frequency
The number of waves that pass a point in a unit time period. It is the inverse of the time period.
Fringe Spacing
The distance between two adjacent bright fringes or two adjacent dark fringes.
Interference
The name given to the superposition of waves that occurs when two waves meet. If the waves are in phase they will constructively interfere, but if they are out of phase they will destructively interfere.
Laser
A light source that produces a collimated and coherent beam.
Longitudinal Wave
A wave with oscillations that are parallel to the direction of energy propagation, Sound waves are an example of longitudinal waves.
Material Dispersion
Waves of different wavelength travel at slightly different speeds through an optical fibre and so reach the end of the fibre at slightly different times, causing pulse broadening. The use of monochromatic light fixes this issue.
Modal Dispersion
Waves enter an optical fibre at slightly different angles, meaning the distance each beam has to travel is slightly different. This leads to the beams reaching the end at different times and so causes pulse broadening.
Node
A position of minimum displacement in a stationary wave.
Optical Fibre
A thin glass fibre through which are passes. Optical fibres usually have cladding surrounding them.
Path Difference
A measure of how far ahead a wave is compared to another wave, usually expressed in terms of wavelength.
Phase Difference
The difference in phase between two points on a wave. It is usually expressed in radians.
Phase
A measure of how far through the wave’s cycle a given point on the wave is.
Polarisation
The restriction of a wave so that it can only oscillate in a single plane. This can only occur for transverse waves.
Pulse Broadening
The elongation of a signal passed down an optical fibre, commonly due to modal or material dispersion.
Refractive Index
A material property that is equal to the ratio between the speed of light in a vacuum and the speed of light in a given material.
Snell’s Law
A law linking a wave’s angle of incidence to its angle of refraction, with the use of the refractive indexes of the mediums involved.
Speed
The product of a wave’s frequency and wavelength.