- #1
luckis11
- 272
- 2
Consider one slit white light diffraction which produces rainbow fringe - black fringe - white fringe-black fringe-rainbow fringe. That is, continuous spectrum (or...two continuous spectrums). My question is, instead of white light, project monochromatic red light. What happens then leaving all other things unchanged?
1) Two thick red fringes, as thick and exactly where it was the thick red area of each previous rainbow. And perhaps also one thick red fringe in the middle.
2) One thick red fringe in the middle, and many more thick or thin red fringes around it. But no obvious connection whatsoever with how thick and where it was the thick red area of each previous rainbow.
1) Two thick red fringes, as thick and exactly where it was the thick red area of each previous rainbow. And perhaps also one thick red fringe in the middle.
2) One thick red fringe in the middle, and many more thick or thin red fringes around it. But no obvious connection whatsoever with how thick and where it was the thick red area of each previous rainbow.
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