Maximum Bright Fringes for Double Slit Experiment

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Homework Statement


At most, how many bright fringes can be formed on either side of the central bright fringe when light of wavelength 644 nm falls on a double slit whose slit separation is 3.64 × 10-6 m?

Homework Equations


m=dsintheta/lamdba

The Attempt at a Solution


m=(3.64x10e-6)(1)/644x10e-9) = 5.65 which is 6 bright fringes right but the system telling me it's wrong?[/B]
 
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That's the full question.
 
Starrrrr said:

Homework Statement


At most, how many bright fringes can be formed on either side of the central bright fringe when light of wavelength 644 nm falls on a double slit whose slit separation is 3.64 × 10-6 m?

Homework Equations


m=dsintheta/lamdba

The Attempt at a Solution


m=(3.64x10e-6)(1)/644x10e-9) = 5.65 which is 6 bright fringes right but the system telling me it's wrong?[/B]
Can the 6th fringe form?
 
ehild said:
Can the 6th fringe form?
I'm not sure so I'm guessing no
 
The brightness fringe should not be rounded from the equation. so yes the answer from the equation is 5.65. Which makes the greatest fringe 5 not 6.