Waves & Optics - Superposition Flashcards

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1
Q

Superposition

A
  • Principle of Superposition: “When two or more waves cross at a point, the displacement at that point is equal to the sum of the displacements of the individual waves.”
  • The individual wave displacements may be positive or negative. If the displacements are vectors, then the sum is calculated by vector addition.
  • Superposition can be used to explain interference, diffraction and standing waves
  • Superposition works for any type of wave (sound waves, water surface waves, electromagnetic waves…) but only under certain conditions.
  • When waves pass beyond a point of intersection, they separate out again and are unaffected.
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2
Q

Conditions for Superposition

A

• The principle of superposition can be applied to any type of wave providing that:
‣ The waves being superposed are of the
same type
‣ The medium that the waves are
propagating through behaves linearly
• If the waves are also coherent then the superposition resembles another wave with the same frequency

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3
Q

Coherence

A
  • If waves from two sources spread out and cross throughout a region of space then superposition occurs at every point, and a pattern of interference is obtained
  • The superposition of waves from two sources usually only results in a stationary interference pattern if the sources are coherent
  • This means that the waves from the sources have both the same frequency and phase difference
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4
Q

Constructive and Destructive interference

A
  • When two coherent waves are superimposed, the amp[litude of the resultant displacement depends on the phase difference of the two waves.
  • This can result in three possible outcomes, constructive, destructive, and partial constructive.
  • When the waves a phase difference which are equal, the two waves will constructively interfere, this means that the resultant amplitude will be equal to the sum of the two amplitudes
  • When the two waves have a phase difference of 180 degrees, they will destructively interfere, this means that the resultant wave will have a amplitude equal to the difference between the two waves.
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5
Q

Path and Phase Difference

A
  • Phase is an angle, which gives the fraction of the progress through a repetitive cycle in terms of degrees between 0 and 2π radians or 0 and 360∘
  • When two coherent waves are superposed, the resultant wave depends on the phase difference between the two.
  • If the waves have followed two different paths to the same point, the phase difference is proportional to the difference in length between the paths, known as the path difference.
  • IF the path difference is an integer multiple of the wavelength then the waves are in phase and interfere constructively.
  • IF the path difference is a half-integer multiple of the wavelength, then the waves are π rad out of phase and interfere destructively if the sources are in phase.
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6
Q

Amplitude and Intensity

A
  • When superposition occurs, for slow mechanical waves the amplitude can usually be observed easily.
  • For high-frequency waves, such as sound or EM waves, the amplitude can be calculated by measuring the wave’s intensity.
  • Intensity is a measure of the energy of the wave in the region, which is proportional to the square of the amplitude
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7
Q

Beats

A
  • When two waves of slightly differing frequencies are superposed at some location, the resultant amplitude appears to vary periodically.
  • The phenomenon is known as beating and is most commonly observed with sound waves.
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