What is superposition?
When two or more waves of the same type meet, the resultant displacement at a point is the vector sum of the displacements due to each individual waves at that point
What is a requirement for superposition of transverse waves?
the two waves share the same axis of polarisation
What is interference?
It is the superposing of two or more waves of the same kind, forming new wave whose resultant amplitude is the sum of displacement of each wave
What does it mean by two waves are in anti-phase?
What happens when two waves are in anti-phase?
When does destructive interference occur?
What is the difference between destructive interference and anti-phase?
What does it mean when two waves are in phase?
What happens when two waves are in phase?
When does constructive interference occur?
What is the difference between constructive interference and in phase?
What is diffraction?
Diffraction is the spreading of waves into its geometric shadow after passing through a slit/gap/aperture or obstacle
When does diffraction effect become prominent?
When size/width of the slit/edge is comparable to the incident wavelength
What are coherent sources?
Does same frequency between two sources imply coherence?
If speed of a wave changes (when medium changes), wavelength changes and phase difference will be non-constant when waves meet at a point
Can two different light sources make coherent sources?
What happens when there are two incoherent waves?
When is interference pattern observable?
If two sources are in phase with path difference of nλ what is the result at a point?
(think of path diff like a function, when you input what phase with nλ, the output is the same)
If two sources are in anti-phase with path difference of nλ what is the result at a point?
(think of path diff like a function, when you input what phase with nλ, the output is the same)
If two sources are in phase with path difference of (n+0.5)λ what is the result at a point?
(think of path diff like an inverse function, when you input what phase with (n+0.5)λ, the output is the opposite)
If two sources are in antiphase with path difference of (n+0.5)λ what is the result at a point?
(think of path diff like an inverse function, when you input what phase with (n+0.5)λ, the output is the opposite)
What are anti-nodal lines?
maximum amplitude due to constructive interference
What are nodal lines?
minimum amplitude lines due to destructive interference