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Lecture 10. Wave propagation. Aims: Fraunhofer diffraction (waves in the “far field”). Young’s double slits Three slits N slits and diffraction gratings A single broad slit General formula - Fourier transform. Fraunhofer diffraction. Diffraction.
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Lecture 10 Wave propagation. • Aims: • Fraunhofer diffraction (waves in the “far field”). • Young’s double slits • Three slits • N slits and diffraction gratings • A single broad slit • General formula - Fourier transform.
Fraunhofer diffraction • Diffraction. • Propagation of partly obstructed waves. • Apertures, obstructions etc... • Diffraction régimes. • In the immediate vicinity of the obstruction: • Large angles and no approximations • Full solution required. • Intermediate distances (near field) • Small angles, spherical waves, • Fresnel diffraction. • Large distances (far field) • Small angles, and plane waves, • Fraunhofer diffraction. • (More formal definitions will come in the Optics course)
Young’s slits • Fraunhofer conditions • For us this means an incident plane wave and observation at infinity. • Two narrow apertures (2 point sources) • Each slit is a source of secondary wavelets • Full derivation (not in handout) is….Applying “cos rule” to top triangle gives
2-slit diffraction • Similarly for bottom ray • Resultant is a superposition of 2 wavelets • The term expi(kR-wt)will occur in allexpressions. We ignoreit - only relative phasesare important.Where s = sinq.
cos-squared fringes • We observe intensitycos-squared fringes. • Spacing inversely proportional to separation of the slits. • Amplitude-phase diagrams. Spacing of maxima Resultant Slit 1 Slit 2
Three slits • Three slits, spacing d. • Primary maxima separated by l/d, as before. • One secondary maximum.
N slits and diffraction gratings • N slits, each separated by d. • A geometric progression, which sums to • Intensity in primary maxima a N2 • In the limit as N goes to infinity, primary maxima become d-functions. A diffraction grating. Spacing, as before N-2, secondary maxima
l/t Single broad slit • Slit of width t. Incident plane wave. • Summation of discrete sourcesbecomes an integral.
Generalisation to any aperture • Aperture function • The amplitude distribution across an aperture can take any form a(y). This is the aperture function. • The Fraunhofer diffraction pattern is • putting ks=K gives a Fourier integral • The Fraunhofer diffraction pattern is the Fourier Transform of the aperture function. • Diffraction from complicated apertures can often be simplified using the convolution theorem. • Example: 2-slits of finite widthConvolution of 2d-functions with asingle broad slit.FT(f*g) a FT(f).FT(g) Cos fringes sinc function