Anmelden

Interference is a characteristic phenomenon exhibited by waves. When two electromagnetic waves interact with their peaks and troughs coinciding, a resulting wave with enhanced amplitude is produced. This is known as constructive interference. In this case, the two waves interacting are in phase with each other.

Alternatively, if the two waves coincide and interact in a way such that the trough of one wave coincides with the peak of the other (in an out of phase manner), the resultant wave will display a much lower amplitude. This is known as destructive interference.

Waves also show a characteristic behavior called diffraction. When a beam of light passes through a slit with a size comparable to the wavelength of the incident beam - the beam bends (or diffracts) around the slit. On the contrary, when a stream of particles is passed through a slit, the particles simply come out through the aperture.

Further, when a beam of light passes through a pair of closely spaced slits separated by a distance comparable to the wavelength of light, circular waves are produced at each slit by the process of diffraction. These two waves interfere with each other such that an interference pattern with alternate dark and bright lines is obtained on a screen placed at a short distance behind the slits.

The bright-line is produced at the center of the screen as the two waves travel an equal distance to reach this point and interfere constructively. When the two waves travel the small distance away from the center in either direction, they travel slightly different distances. They are out of phase. When the difference in their traveled distances is exactly one half of the wavelength,   they meet by producing destructive interference. The dark regions correspond to regions where the peaks for the wave from one slit happen to coincide with the troughs for the wave from the other slit (destructive interference), while the brightest regions correspond to the regions where the peaks for the two waves (or their two troughs) happen to coincide (constructive interference). The diffraction pattern is an inherent property of waves and presents compelling evidence for the wave nature of light. 

This text is adapted from Openstax, Chemistry 2e, Section 6.1: Electromagnetic Energy.

Tags

JoVE CoreJoVE Core Chemistry Chapter 7JoVE Core Chemistry Lesson 1243

Aus Kapitel 7:

article

Now Playing

7.3 : Interferenz und Beugung

Elektronische Struktur von Atomen

29.5K Ansichten

article

7.1 : Das Licht als Welle

Elektronische Struktur von Atomen

47.8K Ansichten

article

7.2 : Das elektromagnetische Spektrum

Elektronische Struktur von Atomen

52.1K Ansichten

article

7.4 : Photoelektrischer Effekt

Elektronische Struktur von Atomen

29.0K Ansichten

article

7.5 : Das Bohrsche Atommodell

Elektronische Struktur von Atomen

48.9K Ansichten

article

7.6 : Emissionsspektren

Elektronische Struktur von Atomen

48.5K Ansichten

article

7.7 : Die Materiewelle nach de Broglie

Elektronische Struktur von Atomen

25.1K Ansichten

article

7.8 : Das Heisenbergsche Unschärferelation

Elektronische Struktur von Atomen

22.7K Ansichten

article

7.9 : Das quantenmechanische Modell eines Atoms

Elektronische Struktur von Atomen

41.4K Ansichten

article

7.10 : Quantenzahlen

Elektronische Struktur von Atomen

33.9K Ansichten

article

7.11 : Atomorbitale

Elektronische Struktur von Atomen

32.6K Ansichten

article

7.12 : Das Paulische Ausschließungsprinzip

Elektronische Struktur von Atomen

32.8K Ansichten

article

7.13 : Die Energien von Atomorbitalen

Elektronische Struktur von Atomen

23.5K Ansichten

article

7.14 : Das Aufbauprinzip und die Hundschen Regeln

Elektronische Struktur von Atomen

41.7K Ansichten

article

7.15 : Elektronenkonfiguration von Multielektronenatomen

Elektronische Struktur von Atomen

36.7K Ansichten

JoVE Logo

Datenschutz

Nutzungsbedingungen

Richtlinien

Forschung

Lehre

ÜBER JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Alle Rechte vorbehalten