Miracles
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Where does the energy go when light undergoes destructive interference?
Miracles said:Where does the energy go when light undergoes destructive interference?
Miracles said:Where does the energy go when light undergoes destructive interference?
Hans de Vries said:Now let me for once be nastyand turn this into the following puzzle:
Hans de Vries said:Two parallel laser beams pointing in the same direction have exactly
the same frequency but they are 180 degrees out of phase. Now let
the beams overlap under an extremely small angle. There will be a
zone where they completely overlap, say for 1 meter or so. In that
region there will be no E nor B field, no Poynting vector, no nothing.
It will be pitch dark...
Somewhere behind this region the beams stop overlapping and they
reappear again. The question is how were energy and momentum
transferred through the dark zone?
Regards, Hans
Hans de Vries said:I found this very nice java applet:
http://www.falstad.com/ripple/ex-2slit.html
With some effort you can make your own two laser beams
OOO said:The Poynting vectors emitting from the laser sources will "move" towards the node plane but then they bend off until they are parallel. They remain parallel (Edit: I think this will actually be more smooth than my description indicates) along the "1 meter" you referred to and afterwards they will move away from the plane again. They will never cross the node plane
Hans de Vries said:
I found this very nice java applet:
http://www.falstad.com/ripple/ex-2slit.html
Hans de Vries said:Indeed, As the simulations show, this dark zone doesn't
occur at all!
I would say that the reason is that the beams need to
have a width much larger as the wavelength, so there
are always multiple bands of additive and subtractive
interference in the direction of the beam. If one tries
to reduce the width of the beams they'll fan out.
Regards, Hans.
For two EM waves which are interfering the total energy of the field remains constant. For photons - The pattern of photons is merely a probability distribution. It doesn't mean that two photons hit the same spot and destructively interfered with each other. Either a photon is detected at R or it is not. The chances are given by a probability distribution.Miracles said:Where does the energy go when light undergoes destructive interference?