Andy Resnick said:
Well, there is a reflection off the air-glass top surface, and it does interfere with the light reflected off the mirror (and there's also interference with any light reflected from the glass-air (curved) surface, but the intensity is very low.
Right, isn't the OP asking why it is low? It isn't as if the top reflection occurs with low amplitude.
Andy Resnick said:
What if I said the fringes were created at the curved surface?
Why do you think there is any significance in ascribing a "creation location" to the fringes? (What if I said they were created just in front of my retina?)
Andy Resnick said:
Yes, but what is the spatial variation of the phase of the incident light at the top (flat) surface? Hint- there isn't any.
Why not? I've only observed Newton's rings under uncollimated illumination from a sodium-vapour lamp, with the illumination directed from a large angle (to prevent observations from directly above being saturated by the specular reflection of the lamp). I think that would produce extreme spatial variation of the incident light phase.
Andy Resnick said:
But to your point about coherence, in order for these fringes to appear, you need light that has a coherence length about the size of the gap
becko said:
Problem is I don't have a clear idea of what "coherence length" is. [..] What I need is an explanation of what is happening without using the word coherence (since I don't know what it means exactly).
becko,
Imagine your light source produces some waves a little bit randomly, so that about half of the peak-to-peak lengths are 9 units, and the rest of the cycles have peak-to-peak length of 11. This means that any two points that are 10 units apart (regardless of whether you start measuring from a peak, node, or trough) will have a small phase difference (neglecting the whole cycle) of plus or minus 1 (which is about a tenth of the average wavelength), and if you add the amplitude at those two points it will certainly almost double (the intensity almost quadruples). If you look at two points that are 25 units apart, the phase difference (neglecting the two complete cycles) could be 2.5-7.5 (i.e., half a wavelength on average), so if one of those points is a peak then the other will be close to a trough (but not exactly: you could have up to about a quarter of a wavelength of misalignment), so the interference between any points with this separation will certainly be destructive but not perfectly complete (the intensity will go low but not quite zero). Lastly, if you consider two points with 1000 separation, there could be anywhere between about 90 and 110 cycles between the points, that is, the possible phase difference is (even ignoring the 100 whole wavelengths) is still plus or minus about 10 entire wavelengths. This means, even if the first point is exactly on a peak, the second point isn't necessarily near a peak or a trough, it could randomly be on any part of a wave-cycle whatsoever, and so when we add these two parts of the wave, we'll need to do statistics to examine how likely the amplitudes are to increase or decrease (in fact we'll find that the intensities will add simply, there is no kind of consistent interference between pairs of points separated this far along the wave, and it makes absolutely no noticeable difference whether the distance was really 1000 units or 1005). So the "coherence-length" is somewhere greater than 10 but less than 1000 units. Does that help at all?