Young's Double Split Flashcards

(8 cards)

1
Q

What happens when white light passes through two double slits?

A

It is dispersed into all the colours of the visible spectrum

Each colour has its own range of wavelengths.

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2
Q

What causes dispersion of light?

A

The refractive index of light (n) is slightly dependent on the frequency of light

This dependency leads to different colours bending at different angles.

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3
Q

In the visible spectrum, how should wavelength answers be formatted?

A

. # # x10-7 m

The first three numbers before the x10-7m will be between 4 and 7.5.

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4
Q

What is the range for the first three numbers in the wavelength format?

A

4.00 to 7.50

Outside this bound, the light isn’t visible and is on another part of the spectrum.

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5
Q

How do you convert a wavelength from meters to nanometers?

A

Multiply by 10^9

For example, 5.75x10-7m equals 575nm.

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6
Q

What is the equivalence of 5.75x10-7m in nanometers?

A

575nm

5.75x10-7m = 0.000000575m = 575x10-9m.

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7
Q

In a Young’s experiment, if the slits are 0.0080mm apart and the screen is set at 0.50m, what is being measured?

A

The colour of laser being used

The position of the bright lines helps determine the wavelength and thus the colour.

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8
Q

Double Slit Experiment With Particles (Electrons)

What is going on?

A

In the double-slit experiment, electrons are fired at two slits and detected on a screen. If electrons acted only as particles, two bands would appear. Instead, many bands form an interference pattern, showing wave behavior. Each electron hits the screen as a single point, but over time the pattern builds up. This demonstrates wave–particle duality: electrons behave like waves while traveling and like particles when detected.

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