Two slit interference: new intensity after doubling width

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SUMMARY

The discussion centers on deriving the new intensity in a two-slit interference pattern after doubling the width of one slit. Key equations include the cosine addition formula and the transformation of the expression into a single cosine form. The participants successfully derived the relationships involving ##\alpha##, ##A##, and ##\phi##, leading to the conclusion that for the equation to hold for all values of ##\theta##, both coefficients must equal zero. The final solution involves eliminating ##\alpha## to solve for ##A## using the identity ##\sin^2\alpha + \cos^2\alpha = 1##.

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maxim07
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Homework Statement
A 2 slit interference pattern is viewed on a screen at distance R>>d from the plane of the slits where d is the slit spacing. If y is the transverse displacement across the screen, with y = 0 corresponding to the forward direction from the centre of the slits the intensity on the screen for small y is given by I = Icos^2(y*pi*d/wR), w is wavelength

If one of the slits is made twice as wide so that the amplitude of the point source has doubled show the intensity becomes

I’ = I/4(9cos^2(y*pi*d/wR) +1)
Relevant Equations
Cos(A) + cos(B) = 2cos(A+B/2)cos(A-B/2)
Here is the solution, I understand how they got E, but I don’t see how they could get E’ from cosine addition formulas? I don’t need to know how to do it with complex numbers.

578AC464-5454-42AD-903B-0608511081BA.jpeg
 
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From a little experimentation, I got that ##\alpha=2\phi/3##. But when I plug that in it does not seem to work. Might be an issue with multiple solutions of ##arccos(c)##.

Cracked it, @maxim07 :
##\cos(\theta)+2\cos(\theta+\phi)=\cos(\theta)+2\cos(\theta)\cos(\phi)-2\sin(\theta)\sin(\phi)##
##=\cos(\theta)(1+2\cos(\phi))-2\sin(\theta)\sin(\phi)##.
Defining ##\cos(\alpha)=\frac{1+2\cos(\phi)}{\sqrt{5+4\cos(\phi)}}## we find that ##\sin(\alpha)=\frac{2\sin(\phi)}{\sqrt{5+4\cos(\phi)}}##
So ##\cos(\theta)+2\cos(\theta+\phi)=(\cos(\theta)\cos(\alpha)-\sin(\theta)\sin(\alpha))\sqrt{5+4\cos(\phi)}##
 
Last edited:
But if you didn’t know the end result where would the sqrt(5 + 4cos(φ)) come from ?
 
The key is to write ##\cos \theta + 2 \cos (\theta + \phi)## as one cosine expression. That is, find ##A## and ##\alpha## such that $$\cos \theta + 2 \cos (\theta + \phi) = A \cos(\theta + \alpha)$$ for all values of ##\theta##.

Hint: One approach is to expand ##\cos(\theta + \phi)## on the left side of the above equation and expand ##\cos(\theta + \alpha)## on the right. Rearrange the overall equation by collecting together all terms containing ##\cos \theta## and all terms containing ##\sin \theta##. Thus obtain an equation of the form $$a \cos\theta + b \sin\theta = 0$$ where ##a## and ##b## are expressions in terms of ##A##, ##\alpha##, and ##\phi##. For this equation to hold for all possible choices of ##\theta##, what can you say about ##a## and ##b##?

An alternate approach is to use phasors. But, I don't know if you are familiar with this method.
 
maxim07 said:
But if you didn’t know the end result where would the sqrt(5 + 4cos(φ)) come from ?
Faced with an equation like ##A\sin(x)+B\cos(x)=C## a useful trick is to let ##\cos(y)=\frac A{\sqrt{A^2+B^2}}##, so ##\sin(y)=\frac B{\sqrt{A^2+B^2}}## and ##\frac C{\sqrt{A^2+B^2}}=\frac A{\sqrt{A^2+B^2}}\sin(x)+\frac B{\sqrt{A^2+B^2}}\cos(x)=\cos(y)\sin(x)+\sin(y)\cos(x)##
##=\sin(x+y)##.
 
TSny said:
The key is to write ##\cos \theta + 2 \cos (\theta + \phi)## as one cosine expression. That is, find ##A## and ##\alpha## such that $$\cos \theta + 2 \cos (\theta + \phi) = A \cos(\theta + \alpha)$$ for all values of ##\theta##.

Hint: One approach is to expand ##\cos(\theta + \phi)## on the left side of the above equation and expand ##\cos(\theta + \alpha)## on the right. Rearrange the overall equation by collecting together all terms containing ##\cos \theta## and all terms containing ##\sin \theta##. Thus obtain an equation of the form $$a \cos\theta + b \sin\theta = 0$$ where ##a## and ##b## are expressions in terms of ##A##, ##\alpha##, and ##\phi##. For this equation to hold for all possible choices of ##\theta##, what can you say about ##a## and ##b##?

An alternate approach is to use phasors. But, I don't know if you are familiar with this method.
tanθ = -a/b ?
 
maxim07 said:
tanθ = -a/b ?
If you have an equation of the form ##a \cos \theta + b \sin \theta = 0##, where ##a## and ##b## are independent of ##\theta##, and if the equation is to hold for all ##\theta##, then you can conclude that ##a = 0## and ##b = 0##. For example, you can let ##\theta = 0## to get ##a = 0##.
 
Ah okay, so then I get 1 + 2cos Φ - Acos α= 0 and -2sin Φ + Asin α = 0
 
maxim07 said:
Ah okay, so then I get 1 + 2cos Φ - Acos α= 0 and -2sin Φ + Asin α = 0
Looks good. You have two unknowns: ##A## and ##\alpha##. And you have two equations.

Can you eliminate ##\alpha## so that you get one equation for ##A##? Hint: ##\sin^2\alpha + \cos^2\alpha = 1##.
 
  • #10
Greta thanks solved it
 
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