Physics, asked by roypintoo7763, 10 months ago

How to demonstrate young's double slit experiment?

Answers

Answered by khushali1232
0

Explanation:

Although Christiaan Huygens thought that light was a wave, Isaac Newton did not. Newton felt that there were other explanations for color, and for the interference and diffraction effects that were observable at the time. Owing to Newton’s tremendous stature, his view generally prevailed. The fact that Huygens’s principle worked was not considered evidence that was direct enough to prove that light is a wave. The acceptance of the wave character of light came many years later when, in 1801, the English physicist and physician Thomas Young (1773–1829) did his now-classic double slit experiment (see [link]).

Young’s double slit experiment. Here pure-wavelength light sent through a pair of vertical slits is diffracted into a pattern on the screen of numerous vertical lines spread out horizontally. Without diffraction and interference, the light would simply make two lines on the screen.

Answered by Riya1045
0

. The theory of Young's boundary diffraction wave is used to explain the formation of double-slit interference fringes. According to this theory individual slit gives rise to two boundary diffraction waves corresponding to interaction of incident light with two edges of the slit.

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