Single Slit Diffraction is like getting surprised by a text you just sent yourself | Doc Physics

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  • čas přidán 28. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 230

  • @WeAreShowboat
    @WeAreShowboat Před 10 lety +72

    Your enthusiasm is contagious. Keep enjoying life. Nicely done!

  • @kolaparadise260
    @kolaparadise260 Před 9 lety +34

    you are an incredible teacher
    voice
    color
    explanation
    and most importantly, fluency, it amazes me that u did that in one single take

    • @DocSchuster
      @DocSchuster  Před 9 lety +4

      Peruvian drummer That's really nice of you. I got pretty lucky on that one!

    • @gregorykarimian3813
      @gregorykarimian3813 Před 2 lety +1

      You mean in one single “phase” haha, sorry, sorry, ill stop, ill stop

  • @peanutz23
    @peanutz23 Před 10 lety +23

    I LOVE YOUR EVIL LAUGH, thank you so much for this video. I do HL IB Physics so this is great!

    • @DocSchuster
      @DocSchuster  Před 10 lety +11

      What? That's my HAPPY laugh. You should hear my evil laugh, though...

  • @princessrad111
    @princessrad111 Před 9 lety +11

    7:44 golden moment

  • @jak5869
    @jak5869 Před 7 lety +13

    Wow your videos are unbelievably better than the crap videos they give me at my university. Thank you so much

  • @azazahamed
    @azazahamed Před 10 lety +3

    Love the enthusiasm. He puts fun in Physics more than Sheldon Cooper. :D

  • @MysticMD
    @MysticMD Před 10 lety +42

    The popcorn was good

  • @blazebluebass
    @blazebluebass Před 10 lety +2

    This was perfect! The explanations were totally clear, absolutely nothing I did not understand. And the excitement was fantastic, too.
    I feel very well prepared for tomorrows period - thank you! = )

  • @absurdu5t
    @absurdu5t Před 9 lety +1

    Thank you so very freaking much. All of your videos are epic.

  • @potatoria
    @potatoria Před 9 lety +4

    I love your enthusiasm!

  • @tomasdanco2779
    @tomasdanco2779 Před 8 lety +1

    "It's like you're in a conversation with yourself, and get interfered by a text that you sent your self" Love it! Thanks for bringing the humor to physics =)

  • @rehabaljahwari6988
    @rehabaljahwari6988 Před 10 lety +5

    You are great .... You make physics very very interesting . ThanX
    Keep going

  • @777teiubesc
    @777teiubesc Před 11 lety +1

    Thanks for deriving the equations- I've found that to be key for understanding physics!

  • @Dr.Isaacs301
    @Dr.Isaacs301 Před 2 lety +1

    Mr. Schuster: Are you taking notes?
    Me: 👀
    Also me skipping back to take notes: 😕 🤔

  • @sweet77creepy
    @sweet77creepy Před 10 lety +1

    doc, this is the first video of yours that im watchin, and man , i'll tell ya. this video needs more views. your teaching is a reflection of the passion i have for physics. when the teacher is as excited as the kid, then ...well, its a party :D cheers.

    • @DocSchuster
      @DocSchuster  Před 10 lety

      Yay! Parties! I'm thrilled to hear that you're exited, too.

  • @jaydeezy123
    @jaydeezy123 Před 7 lety +1

    Excellent video. Really helped me a lot. Thanks so much!

  • @yashen12345
    @yashen12345 Před 11 lety +3

    "thats a dark fringe yo!"
    I LOVE THIS PLZ DONT STAHHHHHPPP EVER

  • @jamesvlasis3817
    @jamesvlasis3817 Před 2 lety

    I can't believe Benson went back to school to get a physics degree

  • @sapphireblue9209
    @sapphireblue9209 Před 3 lety

    6:30 the example made me laugh, thank you. I was not having a good day but this has brightened me :))

  • @DocSchuster
    @DocSchuster  Před 10 lety +1

    Thanks! Happy to help.

  • @misssweethearted
    @misssweethearted Před 9 lety +8

    awww I like the cute little Newton doll at the beginning I want it. hah

  • @LukeR1759
    @LukeR1759 Před 10 lety +8

    Well, my brain is now non existent!

  • @cram9780
    @cram9780 Před 7 lety

    single slit diffraction made me want to to cry

  • @captainaddy9591
    @captainaddy9591 Před 2 lety

    The way he said “goodbye”

  • @DocSchuster
    @DocSchuster  Před 11 lety

    Well, if one slit is two, then each slit is W/2 wide. Also, those two slits are W/2 apart from each other. So, yes, width is also separation, but neither is equal to the width of the real, physical slit width.

  • @marutinandan9359
    @marutinandan9359 Před 10 lety +2

    u r a beaut teacher doc!!

  • @pikan_golman
    @pikan_golman Před 5 lety

    im here sipping my lemonade and getting hyped as hell

  • @Aa-fk8jg
    @Aa-fk8jg Před 3 lety

    Thank you so much Doc!! You’re amazing

  • @grethnueva3413
    @grethnueva3413 Před 3 lety

    I loved this lecture.

  • @myprettygirl91
    @myprettygirl91 Před 6 lety +1

    this is hilarious, thanks for the laughs :))

  • @UH60_PILOT
    @UH60_PILOT Před 8 lety

    Thank you so much! even though Im not good at English, I can understand from your drawings. really good and easy explanation.

  • @kajaldahiya8775
    @kajaldahiya8775 Před 7 lety

    I never enjoyed physics that much that I did today

  • @Shumayal
    @Shumayal Před 10 lety

    Please come and teach at my college. I love you, wished my professors had the same enthusiasm like you.

    • @DocSchuster
      @DocSchuster  Před 10 lety +1

      I'd love to, but I probably shouldn't. Thanks for the invitation, though!

  • @05032885741
    @05032885741 Před 9 lety +1

    REALLLYYYYY HELPFULLLL , THANK YOU !!

  • @zahraabdi6676
    @zahraabdi6676 Před 8 lety

    I love your enthusiasm when teaching. Really kept me listening with having to struggle to concentrate. I just have a question though, what's the point of treating the single slit as multiple slits? Is it just to get a better equation to use when calculating bright fringe width?

  • @MrArteriole
    @MrArteriole Před 10 lety +3

    Hey man! Incredible video, first one of yours I've watched as I've been desperately searching for solid info on single and double slit light wave experiments. Tis people such as your self who have inspired me to go on to want to do much the same thing and teach physics at high school or university.
    The only things I don't seem to understand with all of this is;
    1. If Huygen's principle says there's infinite points along a wave front from which 'secondary wave-lets' can exist, then why isn't there simply infinite interference? I don't see how the interference pattern can exist from this viewpoint. (I think someone asked this earlier, but I thought you may know now?).
    2. At about point 8.20 in the video where by you talk about these two points from which light rays come out from, you say they're both projected with the same angle theta, but then interfere with each other a relatively large distance away. How would this work if they're projected on the same angle, and are therefore parallel? Unless by them being half a phase out means they're pathways change and meet later on?
    Cheers :)

    • @DocSchuster
      @DocSchuster  Před 10 lety +1

      1) Very puzzling concept! Unless there is some impediment (a wall or slit, perhaps), there IS infinite interference. The slit allows only some of the new wavelets to exist, which is the whole reason that light is seen at all above and below our slit. You'll have to also agree that the slit is a very large number of very small slits all sitting on top of each other. That allows me the treatment I've made.
      2) The rays are of course not perfectly parallel, but are VERY NEARLY parallel since the screen is, as you say, a long way away. That distance allows them to be [almost] parallel and finally to meet. Of course, parallel rays would only meet if the screen were infinitely far from the slit, but it would take too long to put it there. (and then, how would you get it back?!?)

    • @MrArteriole
      @MrArteriole Před 10 lety

      Doc Schuster I see. I guess trying to fully understand how things such as this work is pretty difficult as were only working with models, not reality. Although with Huygen's principle, if spherical waves propagate from all points along the wavefront etc etc, then wouldn't an interference pattern be able to exist on the LHS of the slit, as well as the RHS? It would make sense that there would be to much disturbance behind the slit with incoming waves, but if just one wave were to be sent, then once the wave hits the slit, the wavelets would propagate in all directions from all points along the wave, and so create an interference pattern on both sides of the slit? I understand its a 'forward' moving wave and all, but its almost as though semi-spherical waves propagate from each point, just on the RHS of the point of origin. This could then be seen to make more sense for an interference pattern only occurring on the RHS of the slit? Its all pretty nuts

  • @zar1802
    @zar1802 Před 6 lety

    Geez... but I seriously am sitting here eating popcorn and not taking notes!

  • @jukainn
    @jukainn Před 8 lety +5

    I am eating popcorn right now

  • @ayadimishra
    @ayadimishra Před 7 lety

    I wish my class were this fun...Thank youfor this!!

  • @emadrio
    @emadrio Před 11 lety

    you are now my most favorite person

  • @gentleben590
    @gentleben590 Před 11 lety

    I see what you're doing and I like it.

  • @_Nitrous_
    @_Nitrous_ Před 4 měsíci

    It's too chaotic for me.. i feel more confused then i was before 😅

  • @refilwesenosha4468
    @refilwesenosha4468 Před 10 lety +3

    love how you put fun into your teaching.....i like the "fix you bow tie newton" line.....killed me

  • @junhaong9268
    @junhaong9268 Před 3 lety

    So essentially single slit diffraction proves that parallel line do intersect eventually...woah

  • @kharicky
    @kharicky Před 5 lety

    Nothing weird just that light is not a particle. It bends on the walls of slit.

  • @aaryanoberoi22
    @aaryanoberoi22 Před 9 lety +1

    You are amazing!:D

  • @m.hamzaramay6599
    @m.hamzaramay6599 Před 8 lety

    Diffraction is prominent when wavelength of light is large as compared to the object (small ball for example).In the slit experiment we say that if slit is small then there will be more prominent diffraction ,isn't the distance between the slits acts as a object here ?

  • @shresthabijay26
    @shresthabijay26 Před 7 lety

    i like your funny style.. Nice work

  • @weiv6229
    @weiv6229 Před 3 lety

    i love the title

  • @Zerpentile93
    @Zerpentile93 Před 10 lety

    Thanks for the help. I wish I was as interested as you in physics. I never do this when I study 12:12.

  • @AdityaPratapSingh-ss8wg
    @AdityaPratapSingh-ss8wg Před 6 lety +3

    Mistake - whole no. Starts with 0,1,3.... Not 1,2,3.....

  • @Blooby1234
    @Blooby1234 Před 9 lety +6

    Why does is split in half and not in another quantity, such as 3 or 5?

    • @DocSchuster
      @DocSchuster  Před 8 lety +1

      +Julia Zorthian Try the maff of that split and see what it looks like. I think it would work!

    • @Kelvo980908
      @Kelvo980908 Před 8 lety

      +not anyone I've been wondering why the whole night! still no answer...

  • @Chirag1496
    @Chirag1496 Před 10 lety +3

    Very good.
    btw, whole no. include zero @15:16

  • @nikemaul
    @nikemaul Před 10 lety +2

    Great !!!!!!!!! you gave me many details

  • @GauravGupta-by1ml
    @GauravGupta-by1ml Před 4 lety

    Awesome another tutorial..

  • @DocSchuster
    @DocSchuster  Před 11 lety +1

    Wow, thanks! I like you, too!

  • @anagr93
    @anagr93 Před 8 lety

    OH MY GOD THANK YOU SO MUCH SIR!

  • @massivejester
    @massivejester Před 10 lety

    Thank you for this video! :) Subscribing

  • @DocSchuster
    @DocSchuster  Před 11 lety

    Thanks! I should really look these things up before I start, right?!?

  • @jameshuang9568
    @jameshuang9568 Před 10 lety +3

    it's probably not my first time, but i still wanna say thank you!!!!!

  • @sarahbiebah
    @sarahbiebah Před 8 lety

    Why couldn't we have done the same calculations for the bright spot? Or, let me guess, there are different ranges of bright rather than the one completely dead spot (dark) so we need more complex calculations to calculate it's position?

  • @sunke88
    @sunke88 Před 11 lety

    is this how cinema theaters work?

  • @marcoweissmuller8563
    @marcoweissmuller8563 Před 7 lety

    Throughout the last century, it was great importance to know if the photon's motion is like a wave or like a particle's motion.
    Saleh Theory give a coherent answer to this question on SALEH THEORY's Video: A Revolution in Light Theory

  • @longvu5937
    @longvu5937 Před 7 lety

    thank you so muchhhhh !

  • @mattheoswho1010
    @mattheoswho1010 Před 6 lety +1

    But what about the interference of rays from all the other positions on the two halves of the slit, that are not at a distance of W/2? I don't get it.
    You can form infinite pairs of rays from the two halves, but we just consider the ones who are at a distance of exactly W/2 (which are also an infinite number of pairs don't get me wrong). What is going on here? What am I getting wrong?

  • @emogirl2857
    @emogirl2857 Před 7 lety

    im actually taking notes, also eaitng popcorn

  • @kamilahkent64
    @kamilahkent64 Před 6 lety

    thank you for this!

  • @accio_biryani
    @accio_biryani Před 9 lety +1

    Thank you so much sir really u r incredible. I would have been more fortunate if you were my physics lecturer. Well here r few topics pls let me know if u can help me in these.....diffraction intensity equationdiffraction at circular aperture (Newton rings)absent spectra in diffraction

    • @DocSchuster
      @DocSchuster  Před 9 lety +2

      +md ajaaz Check my video on Poisson! The other topics appear to various degrees in my diffraction videos, but they don't have their own videos. Thanks for watching and learning. Be sure to work problems.

  • @Koolki
    @Koolki Před 5 lety

    You remind me of Jake Peralta from Brooklyn 99, fun listening to this

  • @harryburiram
    @harryburiram Před 11 lety

    love your videos!

  • @mgallegoballester
    @mgallegoballester Před 10 lety

    Hi Doctor, I have another question for you
    I suppose that you're dividing the slit into any number of slits, as many as you want, because of Huygens' principle. But you're only taking rays that are at a distance equal to the width divided by a natural number (w/n) to calculate dark fringes in their intersections (interference), at infinite. So you take two rays separated w/2 to calculate the first dark fringe; two rays separated w/4 to calculate the second dark fringe; and so on. The problem I find is: if you just move a little closer one ray to the other after having calculated the first dark fringe, then these two new rays will interfere destructivly just a little higher in the screen, producing a new dark fringe a little higher (the angle theta will not be very much increased). That would produce a totally dark screen, or maybe totally bright. Where is my mistake?
    It's hard to explain without a picture, and I know it may be hard for you to understand it too, but I hope you will. Thank you very much

  • @a.syndeed
    @a.syndeed Před 2 lety

    The number of zones you divide the slit into doesn't necessarily have to be a power of 2. It seems to me any even number would do the trick...

  • @chinmayshah4790
    @chinmayshah4790 Před 9 lety +4

    Doc Schuster 0 is part of whole no at 15:21 sec

    • @OnufrievS
      @OnufrievS Před 5 lety

      It's okay because it will still give you a dark screen xD

  • @utsukushi1234
    @utsukushi1234 Před 6 lety

    Unbelievably saddened about the wedding ring, I want to marry you.

  • @pinkybananas1
    @pinkybananas1 Před 7 lety

    oh my gooooooddd single slit diffraction T_____T

  • @jnxmaster
    @jnxmaster Před 10 lety

    Great vid! Keep it up!

  • @amansinghal2431
    @amansinghal2431 Před 7 lety

    thanks sir it really really helped

  • @zungnguyen5300
    @zungnguyen5300 Před 5 lety +3

    why W/2 but not W or W/3 or whatever it is?

    • @donegal79
      @donegal79 Před 5 lety

      w or w/3 or w/5 are all fine......take w/3.....divide slit into thirds....call points between slits s1 and s2 A B and C.....if path difference between s1 and A is lamda/2 then all points between s1 and B destructively interfere (s1 cancels A, points between s1 and A destroy successive points between A and B....leaving one -third of points, those between B and C to all more or less combine to give a subsidiary maximum at that angle. Geometry says that w/3(Sin theta) = lambda/2...so first subsidiary max occurs at w Sin theta = 3lambda/2. Similar arguments work for w/5 etc etc

  • @goodboi7665
    @goodboi7665 Před 4 lety +1

    ARE YOU NINJA

  • @cram9780
    @cram9780 Před 7 lety

    if we assume that maxima are found at odd half integers of lambda, for example ø = 3Lambda/2a
    you can create that maxima by splitting a slit into three slits, slits 1, 2, and 3. so all the waves from 1 interfere destructively with the waves in 2, and only 3 contributes to the maxima at that point. if you have 5 slits, 1 kills 3, 2 kills 4, and only 5 contributes to the maxima, thus ø =5lambda/2a. does that make any sense?

  • @AbhishekKumar-rn3dq
    @AbhishekKumar-rn3dq Před 7 lety

    great dude .........great explanation.😋😊😇

  • @DocSchuster
    @DocSchuster  Před 11 lety

    In my derivation, I can't have six or ten slits, etc. My simple argument never considers that a single slit be seen as three slits. I guess you'd have to draw TWO red dots on it and see what happens. Good luck!

  • @babhishek4735
    @babhishek4735 Před 7 lety

    very nice lecture

  • @rajathjackson
    @rajathjackson Před 10 lety +16

    Sir, are you a family member of Walter Lewin......? You teach really great..Thanx for the video.

    • @DocSchuster
      @DocSchuster  Před 10 lety +8

      I am flattered by the question! Thank you!

    • @ayadimishra
      @ayadimishra Před 7 lety

      Rajath Krishna R XD same!

  • @aurelienyonrac
    @aurelienyonrac Před 3 lety

    Excellent, but what about one photon at a time?
    Any one? Wgat a great teacher

  • @aaryanoberoi22
    @aaryanoberoi22 Před 9 lety +1

    And that's supposed to be Natural number set!!

  • @Matixcubix
    @Matixcubix Před 10 lety

    How are the bright fringes defined in the single slit diffraction?

  • @danwilloughby728
    @danwilloughby728 Před 7 lety

    Do you still get interference when the wavelength is exactly the same length as the slit (W)?
    Huygens explanation states each source will produce wavelets that interact, but if there is only room for one 'wavelet' then how does interference occur?
    Seems to work with the maths also as if Wsinx=landa then sinX=1 when W=landa, which puts the first dark fringe at 90 degrees which is saying there wont be a dark fringe, just a light fringe gradually decreasing?
    Thanks for any help and for the video

  • @pokerater4463
    @pokerater4463 Před 8 lety +1

    amazing.......thnks u really are my teacher.......:) love from me

  • @sachinrath123
    @sachinrath123 Před 6 lety

    seems when there is destructive interference we l get a dark spot and in constructive one bright spots with less intensity,so bright fringes,how are dark fringes ? are they having less darkness or less brightness.

  • @shivambhatyar
    @shivambhatyar Před 7 lety

    Come on Newton fix your bow tie XD

  • @aayushnahata92
    @aayushnahata92 Před 11 lety

    now,considering 1 slit as 2 here, the distance between the two slits is supposed to be d.Then why are u taking it as half the slits.why is not the distance just the point?

  • @severeddaff
    @severeddaff Před 11 lety

    Because I put a red dot in it!

  • @lamudri
    @lamudri Před 11 lety

    Why does the slit have to be divided into powers of 2? Don't any multiples of 2 work as well?

  • @gurulinggbiradar6982
    @gurulinggbiradar6982 Před 3 lety

    i have a question .if the wavelength of light is very small,then even a very small distance matters right.then how can we assume parallel rays when we know there will be some extra path difference right and it could be comparable to lights wavelength.

  • @Emzo99
    @Emzo99 Před 9 lety +1

    But he did stick needles in his eyes, so that's cool hahaha

    • @raouf31
      @raouf31 Před 8 lety

      Doc Schuster Damn ur lucky

  • @aminuddinhilmi1
    @aminuddinhilmi1 Před 9 lety +2

    Dark french

  • @MysticMD
    @MysticMD Před 10 lety

    When you "separate" the slit into 4, do the rays converge to a single point on the screen?!? And it represents a single dark spot?

  • @Abdiga_
    @Abdiga_ Před 10 lety

    I see that you're using the small angle approximation for the single slit so when can you not assume that the angle is very small? Thank you

    • @DocSchuster
      @DocSchuster  Před 10 lety

      That depends only on how correct you want to be! If you're happy with an error of 1%, calculate the difference between the (messier) true relationship and the SAP, set it equal to your 1% error, and solve for angle!

    • @leisryan
      @leisryan Před 10 lety

      Doc Schuster This just debunked QM mystery fanatics in their faces...! Simple but GENIUS...! Modern QM mystery advocates should go back to College and master Elementary Wave Theory..! instead...!

  • @PAA-ne3pc
    @PAA-ne3pc Před 4 lety

    10:39 ohmmm yess why not ! 😂