Calculating de Broglie Wavelength & Double-Slit Fringe Width

Join the discussion
Ask a follow-up here, or get your own question answered by working scientists, mathematicians and engineers — people, not an autocomplete.
Real named experts · corrections over time · the nuance an AI answer skips
7 replies · 2K views
v_pino
Messages
156
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement


Find the de Broglie wavelength for an electron with v=0.001c. Find the angular width of the central bright fringe in a double slit experiment, with the separation of the two slits d=50nm.


Homework Equations



wavelength = h/mv

d sin(theta)=n*wavelength

The Attempt at a Solution



For the wavelength, I got 2.42x10^-9m. I think this sounds correct.

Is my second equation for diffraction applicable here? I know that it is double slits so there will be interference and not just diffraction. If this equation is applicable, the my answer is 2*theta = 5.55 degrees.

Or is there a specific equation for double slit that I should use?
 
on Phys.org
So does it mean that the question is just asking for the angle to the first maximum as in that of a diffraction pattern using dsin(theta) = n*wavelength?
 
Sorry for not understanding the simplest of the idea here. So are you saying that the diffraction equation can be used in the question even though it is asking for interference? If so, the answer should simply be 2*theta with theta being from the equation d*sin(theta)=n*wavelength?
 
I don't get where you are trying to lead me here. Am I missing a big clue? Should I be using some sort of approximations? Plus I don't know the distance from screen to source - should I be estimating this?