What Is the Required Distance for Young's Double-Slit Experiment?

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The discussion focuses on calculating the required distance from the slits to the screen in Young's double-slit experiment, given a wavelength of 473 nm and a slit separation of 0.389 mm. The spacing between the first and second dark fringes is specified as 6.71 mm. Participants clarify the use of the correct equations for dark fringes, emphasizing the need to apply the small angle approximation. The final calculation leads to a distance of approximately 5.52 m, confirming the solution's accuracy. The conversation highlights the importance of correctly identifying fringe orders and applying the appropriate formulas.
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Homework Statement


Light of wavelength 473 nm falls on two
slits spaced 0.389 mm apart.
What is the required distance from the slit
to a screen if the spacing between the first and
second dark fringes is to be 6.71 mm?
Answer in units of m.



Homework Equations



sin\theta= m\lambda/d

x=tan\theta*L

The Attempt at a Solution



\theta = sin-1{2*473e-9m / .389e-3 m} = .139336 degrees

L = 6.71e-3 m / tan .139336 = 2.75919
 
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Hi Kris1120,

Kris1120 said:

Homework Statement


Light of wavelength 473 nm falls on two
slits spaced 0.389 mm apart.
What is the required distance from the slit
to a screen if the spacing between the first and
second dark fringes is to be 6.71 mm?
Answer in units of m.



Homework Equations



sin\theta= m\lambda/d

I don't believe this is the formula you want. They are referring to the dark fringes in this problem.


Also, when you solve for the distance remember they want the distance between two fringes, not the distance from one fringe to the center point.
 
Ok so I am using the equation sin(theta) = (m +.5) lambda / d ... Does that mean I do not use the equation to solve for x?
 
Kris1120 said:
Ok so I am using the equation sin(theta) = (m +.5) lambda / d ... Does that mean I do not use the equation to solve for x?

You do still have to solve for x.

However, I think here you should use the small angle approximation that combines both equations (because for small enough angles sin(theta)=tan(theta)). Does your book have that formula?
 
No. I can't find it
 
Kris1120 said:
No. I can't find it

For constructive interference, you have the two equations that you had in your original post:

<br /> \sin\theta= \frac{m\lambda}{d}<br />

<br /> \tan\theta= \frac{x}{L}<br />

For small angles,

<br /> \frac{x}{L} =\frac{m\lambda}{d}<br />
so you can find the distance along the screen x directly for each line order (again, when the angles are small). You can do the same thing with the destructive interference case, and get the same equation with m \to (m+1/2).
 
If I am not misunderstanding... I set the sin equation equal to the tan equation and solve for L... I am still not getting it correct though. I am trying to look the equation up on google.
 
Maybe I am using the wrong m... m=2?
 
Kris1120 said:
If I am not misunderstanding... I set the sin equation equal to the tan equation and solve for L... I am still not getting it correct though. I am trying to look the equation up on google.

The formula that I mentioned for the destructive interference:

<br /> x = L \frac{(m+\frac{1}{2} )\lambda}{d}<br />

gives the x value for each fringe. What they tell you in the problem is that the difference in the x values is 6.71mm. Do you see what to do?

I just saw your last post. The first order dark fringe would have m=0, and the second order dark fringe would have m=1, based on how you wrote your destructive interference condition.
 
  • #10
6.71 mm = [L((1+.5) * 473 nm)/ .389 mm] - [L((0+.5)*473nm)/ .389 mm] and solve for L? I get L = 5.51809 m is that correct?
 
  • #11
Kris1120 said:
6.71 mm = [L((1+.5) * 473 nm)/ .389 mm] - [L((0+.5)*473nm)/ .389 mm] and solve for L? I get L = 5.51809 m is that correct?

That looks right to me.
 
  • #12
Great! Thank you for being so patient with me.
 
  • #13
I'm glad to help!
 

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