xArcherx said:
Although shining two flashlights onto the same spot does cause the spot to be brighter than either individual flashlight, would that mean you are simply getting a constructive interference without the destructive? Or is it simply a larger quantity of photons?
In this case, there is no interference. As you said, there is just an increase in the number of photons due to having two flashlights instead of one.
xArcherx said:
What is meant by "same coherence volume"? Would a laser be an example of such, where the beam passes through two slots creating an interference pattern on a back screen? I've always wondered about that experiment and the shining of two flashlights is why. As you said, if you shine flashlights at the same spot there should be an interference pattern but there isn't one. How is it that the light coming from the same source shining through two slots produces the pattern while the light coming from two difference sources (kinda representing the light as it comes from each slot) doesn't? Also, I always thought that the intensity (brightness) of a light is proportional to the quantity of photons emanating from the source (or reflection). The interference experiment says that the increase and decrease in intensity is due to constructive and destructive interference. Is it one, or the other, or both?
To explain interference, you have to take the underlying fields into account. From a classical point of view, intensity (corresponding to the number of photons) is roughly speaking the square of the underlying em-field. The field is characterized by amplitude and phase. In order for interference to occur, we need the superposition of several fields with a fixed phase relationship, so the fields can add up (when in phase) or cancel (when in antiphase). Taking any arbitrary fields, the phase relationship will be random, so no interference will occur. You just add the squares of the single fields.
If the origin of the two fields is the same source however - like from two atoms inside the same laser - there might be a fixed phase relationship, which allows the fields to add up or cancel and thereby produces interference. So one can define an area of the light source within which there is a fixed phase relationship (you can imagine, that the fields from atoms next to each other have a fixed phase relationship where atoms, which are e.g. 2 meters apart, do not) and some delay, during which interference will occur (if you split a coherent beam, delay one of the arms and recombine them, you can see interferences for short delay times, where for long delay times the phase relationship is random again). So the distance photons can travel during the maximum delay, which still shows interference, times the area mentioned before gives you some kind of volume, which is a first estimation of what a coherence volume is. Generally speaking, the more monochromatic a source is, the larger the coherence volume will be.
From a more mathematical point of view, there is no interference, if the sum of the squares of the single fields equals the square of the sum of the single fields and interferences occur, if the square of the sum of the single fields shows additional terms.