Physics, asked by ansul7343, 1 year ago

Why is diffraction a wave phenomenon?

Answers

Answered by twinkle1125
1

Hello friend.....

Here's ur answer.....

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One consequence of diffraction is that sharp shadows are not produced. The phenomenon is the result of interference (i.e., when waves are superimposed, they may reinforce or cancel each other out) and is most pronounced when the wavelength of the radiation is comparable to the linear dimensions of the obstacle.✔️✔️

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Hope it helped u......☺️☺️

Answered by harsha1491
0

Basically diffraction is the "invasion" of the space behind an obstacle by light shining on an aperture.

In classical physics, the diffraction phenomenon is described as the interference of waves according to the Huygens–Fresnel principle that treats each point in the wave-front as a collection of individual spherical wavelets.

Diffraction has an impact on the acoustic space

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