Interference fringes between rectangular pieces of glass

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating the angle of a wedge formed by two rectangular glass pieces with a thin strip of paper inserted between them. The problem involves determining the relationship between the wavelength of light, the number of interference fringes, and the wedge's angle. The user attempts to derive the angle using the formula related to fringe spacing and the geometry of the setup. Another participant confirms the user's approach and provides additional insights on the relationship between thickness, fringe spacing, and the angle. The conversation emphasizes the importance of correctly interpreting the fringe spacing to arrive at the right solution.
Yroyathon
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hello again folks, this is the last problem that I haven't gotten in this week's homework. see attached image.

Homework Statement


Two rectangular pieces of glass (see attached image, I painstakingly made it with a very fussy/crash-ey program) are laid on top of one another on a plane surface. A thin strip of paper is inserted between them at one end, so that a wedge of air is formed. The plates are illuminated by perpendicularly incident light of wavelength 595 nm, and 18 interference fringes per centimeter-length of wedge appear. What is the angle of the wedge?

Homework Equations


x/y = L/d (similar triangles)
2y = (m + 1/2) * lambda
Tan theta = (y / x)

The Attempt at a Solution


calculating x' from x(m+1) - x(m), I get x'=(L/d) * (lambda/2) . the change in x, x', I think is the space between the fringes. but whether this is 1/ (18/(10^(-2))) or 18/(10^(-2)) I'm not sure. The latter is way too big, and resulted in an incorrect answer. The former is ultimately 1/1800, which seems intuitively right.

so 1/1800 = (L/d) * (lambda/2).
L/d = 2/(1800*lambda)
d/L = (1800*lambda)/2
theta = Arctan (d/L) =Arctan ((1800*lambda)/2)

does this look right? I haven't calculated or submitted this answer, as i wanted to wait and think it over before wasting any more of my last 3 chances to get it right.

Thanks for any tips or suggestions.
,Yroyathon
 

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I think you have it right.
You get a bright fringe when the thickness is nL/2 (using L instead of lambda).
thickness = x*tan(A) so x = nL/(2*tan(A)) and the horizontal distance between fringes is
dx = .5*L/tan(A)
Your dx is .01/18 = .5*L/tan(A)
tan(A) = 900L
 
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