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Effects of Breathing on an Interferometer. Susan Gosse Daniel Freno Junior Lab II. Breath Affects Interference Fringes. We see roughly ½ of a fringe shift when someone breaths on air in the interferometer Theories as to why: Different temperature results in different n air
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Effects of Breathing on an Interferometer Susan Gosse Daniel Freno Junior Lab II
Breath Affects Interference Fringes • We see roughly ½ of a fringe shift when someone breaths on air in the interferometer • Theories as to why: • Different temperature results in different nair • Bernoulli pressure changes result in different index of refraction (nair) for air • Water vapor from breath changes nair • Higher CO2 content changes nair • “Stellar Aberration” effects due to wind velocity • Assumptions • Path length of 5 cm • Temperature between 21 ºC (normal) and 37 ºC • Humidity between 35% (normal) and no more than 70% • Pressure possibly lowered from 98 kPa – not much though
Simplified Equation with T, p, RH • p = pressure in kPa • t = temperature in Celsius • RH = relative humidity in percent (ranges from 0 to 100) • Valid ONLY for wavelength ≈ 633 nm • Agrees with full Ciddor equation within 5 x 10-5 for • 90 kPa < p < 110 kPa • 0 % < RH < 70% • 350 μmol/mol < CO2 concentration < 550 μmol/mol • Dependence approximately linear for pressure, humidity • Stronger, more complicated dependence for temperature
Looking at Temperature • Temperature plays HUGE role • Max expected shift is 2 fringes • 21 ºC to 37 ºC • Enough for effect seen Δm ≈ 2
Bernoulli on Compressible Fluids • Based on mass conservation and assumption of no heat transfer, Bernoulli’s equation says that as velocity increases, pressure decreases (with caveats) Picture from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bernoulli's_principle
Bernoulli’s Equation • The amount of material entering V1 equals the amount entering V2 • The energy entering V2 equals the amount leaving V1 • Assumes no heat transfer, viscous flows, etc. • Energy is sum of • kinetic energy • gravitational energy • internal energy of fluid • p dV work energy Mass Conservation: Energy Conservation: ρ = density Φ = gravitational potential energy/unit mass Є = internal energy/unit mass
Bernoulli’s Equation • Thus the result ‘as pressure goes down, velocity goes up’ • Assuming level height (dropping gravity term) microscopically • When velocity increases, it means that a greater proportion of each molecule’s energy is directed in the forward direction • Less energy is directed outward in other directions • Pressure is a result of this outward motion • Thus less pressure
Looking at Pressure • Pressure can play big role • Would need ΔP = 1 kPa to shift ½ fringe • Doubtful we are creating this much change Δm ≈ 0.5
Looking at Humidity • Humidity plays small role • Even if we went from 0% to 70%, only 1/10th fringe • Not responsible for effect Δm ≈ 0.1
CO2 Effects • The Engineering Metrology Toolbox website suggests that CO2 effects are negligible compared to other effects • Closed rooms typically have concentration of 450 μmol/mol (μmol/mol = ppm = parts per million) • 300 μmol/mol is lowest concentration likely to be found normally • 600 μmol/mol is highest likely to find in an indoor setting • Using the Ciddor calculator with standard values and varying CO2 concentrations from 300 to 600 μmol/mol • n = 1.000261742 for 300 μmol/mol • n = 1.000261783 for 600 μmol/mol • Δn = 4.1 x 10-8 • Δ fringes = 0.01 • Caveat that extreme range could exceed equation limits of validity
Aberration Effects • A perpendicular velocity added by the breath could cause the light to travel a longer path length • Similar to stellar aberration • Unlikely since very slow velocity compared to speed of light http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aberration_of_light
Conclusion • Most likely, effect of ½ fringe shift is due to temperature • Can easily account for this difference and more • Pressure could be cause, but unlikely since need 1 kPa change • Would have to be further tested to determine • Humidity and CO2 are NOT the causes • Aberration is unlikely due to low velocity of breath
Dependence on Temp, Pressure • Where • T = temperature • p = pressure • α= 0.00366 • βT= (1.049 – 0.0157T)10-6 • β15= 0.8135X10-6
Experimental Results for nair • Trial one : nair = 1.00021 • Trial two: nair = 1.00021 • Theory tells us that nair = 1.00026 – this small discrepancy may be due to measurement inaccuracies, or possibly to the effect of the glass plates
Optical Path Length Pressure chamber n L • The length traveled by light with the index of refraction of the medium taken into account • s = 2nL • s is the optical path length, n is the index of refraction and L is the length of the vacuum chamber • Rememberthe light passes through the chamber twice (factor of 2) • ∆s = 2∆nL CHANGE in Optical Path Length • Shift of m number of fringes ∆s = 2∆nL ∆n = ∆s/2L • If ∆s is one wavelength, then m is one fringe • ∆n = λ/2L ∆n = mλ/2L m = 2∆nL/ λ
Index of Refraction: Theory • na = index of refraction • cv = speed of light in vacuum • ca = speed of light in air • f = frequency of light • L = length of chamber • wv = no. wavelengths passing through chamber in vacuum • wa = no. wavelengths passing through chamber in air • L/wv is equal to the wavelength of the laser • wa is found by adding measured number of fringes passed to wv
Index of Refraction in Air • m = 2L(na-nv)/λ • m is the number of fringes that have gone past while returning to 1 atm from vacuum: m = 30.003 • L is the length of the vacuum chamber: L = 3.81 cm • nv= 1 • λ of HeNe laser: λ = 633nm We extrapolated our line to zero pressure and the number of fringes there (y-intercept) is our m. Using this equation for all 5 sets of our data, we calculated an average value for na=1.00024. According to the above equation, from the American Handbook of Physics, where P is the pressure inside the chamber and T is the temperature of the room, na=1.00028.