dervast
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Hi can u please explain me the difference between refraction and diffraction?
spacetime said:Another interesting fact is that though refraction can be explained if you take into account only the particle picture of light, diffraction cannot be explained.
spacetime
Physics
ZapperZ said:This is not true.
vanesch said:Probably the poster meant the NEWTONIAN particle picture of light...
ZapperZ said:This is not true.
Diffraction is a DIRECT manifestation of the Uncertainty principle based on the determination of a photon's transverse position by the slit. Furthermore, the Marcella paper that I've mentioned several times clearly derived purely using quantum mechanics of the diffraction pattern and the interference pattern from multiple slits.[1]
Zz.
[1] T.V. Marcella, Eur. J. Phys., v.23, p.615 (2002).
spacetime said:Yes, I was wrong in what I said. Diffraction can indeed be explained using the photon picture, that is the particle nature of light. Actually, I was referring to the historical fact that diffracion could not be explained using the corpuscle picture, which could still have explained refraction by proper assumptions.
Thanks Zz.
ZapperZ said:IF that is true (I doubt it), then someone is severely out-of-date.
Zz.
spacetime said:Yes, I was wrong in what I said. Diffraction can indeed be explained using the photon picture, that is the particle nature of light. Actually, I was referring to the historical fact that diffracion could not be explained using the corpuscle picture, which could still have explained refraction by proper assumptions.
Thanks Zz.
sophiecentaur said:If the term 'diffraction' is taken to mean the way the propagation of a wave is affected by some sort of obstruction to its path then how is refraction anything other than subset of diffraction - just like interference is also a subset?
The results of all three can be calculated by integrating the contributions of the full width of incident wavefront to find out what happens beyond the structure of interest. (The Huygens idea)
The above is an essentially classical approach but I think it applies even if you want to include Quantum interactions.