Why Do Narrower Slits Produce More Fringes in Young's Experiment?

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Narrower slits in Young's experiment lead to the production of more fringes due to the widening of the central lobe in the diffraction pattern, despite the decrease in light intensity. The intensity formula combines interference from two slits and the diffraction pattern from a single slit, where a smaller slit width results in a wider diffraction pattern. As the slit width decreases, the central lobe expands, allowing more fringes to fit within this area. While the overall brightness of the pattern diminishes, the number of observable fringes increases. Understanding this relationship can be aided by visualizing the equation through graphing software.
Priyadarshini
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When the slits are made narrower (but with same separation) why are more fringes produced? If the slits are narrower, less light enters, so less light interferes with each other, so lesser number of fringes should be produced, isn't it?
 
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Priyadarshini said:
If the slits are narrower, less light enters, so less light interferes with each other, so lesser number of fringes should be produced, isn't it?
That's not how the logic goes for this problem. It's true that as the slit width decreases, the diffraction pattern becomes dimmer, but that's not the reason why there are more fringes observed within the central lobe of the diffraction pattern. In order to understand the reason, let's take a look at the equation of the diffraction pattern
$$
I(x) \propto \cos^2\left(\frac{\pi d x}{\lambda L}\right) \textrm{sinc}^2 \left(\frac{\pi b x}{\lambda L}\right)
$$
where ##d## the slit separation, ##b## slit width, and ##L## the distance between slit plane and the screen. In that equation, the fringes are described by the cosine term enveloped by a wider ##\textrm{sinc}## function. The width of the central lobe is proportional to ##\frac{\lambda L}{\pi b}##. Therefore if the slit width ##b## decreases, the central lobe in the diffraction pattern becomes wider and more fringes are covered .
 
blue_leaf77 said:
That's not how the logic goes for this problem. It's true that as the slit width decreases, the diffraction pattern becomes dimmer, but that's not the reason why there are more fringes observed within the central lobe of the diffraction pattern. In order to understand the reason, let's take a look at the equation of the diffraction pattern
$$
I(x) \propto \cos^2\left(\frac{\pi d x}{\lambda L}\right) \textrm{sinc}^2 \left(\frac{\pi b x}{\lambda L}\right)
$$
where ##d## the slit separation, ##b## slit width, and ##L## the distance between slit plane and the screen. In that equation, the fringes are described by the cosine term enveloped by a wider ##\textrm{sinc}## function. The width of the central lobe is proportional to ##\frac{\lambda L}{\pi b}##. Therefore if the slit width ##b## decreases, the central lobe in the diffraction pattern becomes wider and more fringes are covered .
If the central lobe becomes wider, how are more fringes formed?
Is there a simpler logic? We haven't studied that formula yet.
 
Priyadarshini said:
If the central lobe becomes wider, how are more fringes formed?
Is there a simpler logic? We haven't studied that formula yet.
The first part of the intensity formula is the interference of two slits. The second part of the formula, which determines how wide the observed interference pattern is, is the diffraction pattern of a single slit. Ideally the slits are very narrow, making the diffraction pattern of a single slit, and thereby the entire pattern, very wide, but the slits need to be wide enough to let enough light through to see the pattern. As the slits are widened, the observed interference pattern narrows. (The single slit diffraction pattern has zero intensity at m*lambda=b*sin(theta) where m=non-zero integer. The central lobe (brightest area) is the region around m=0. Notice as the slit width b is made larger, the spread of angle theta between the m=1 and m=-1 zero's of the single slit diffraction pattern decreases. )
 
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The diffraction pattern is the product of two effects: the single slit diffraction pattern and the idealized (zero width) double slit pattern. With an idealized double slit, all your fringes are the same brightness and you have unlimited number of them. If you've studied the single slit pattern, you should know that a smaller slit gives you a wider pattern.
 
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Priyadarshini said:
Is there a simpler logic? We haven't studied that formula yet.
I believe the previous two posts have elaborated the answer in a simpler way. The quickest way, however, to get a grasp of how that equation behaves is to use a function plotter program to plot it and play around with the parameter ##b## (slit width).
 
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So I know that electrons are fundamental, there's no 'material' that makes them up, it's like talking about a colour itself rather than a car or a flower. Now protons and neutrons and quarks and whatever other stuff is there fundamentally, I want someone to kind of teach me these, I have a lot of questions that books might not give the answer in the way I understand. Thanks

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