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Chapter 5: Superposition of waves

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Title: Chapter 5: Superposition of waves


1
Chapter 5 Superposition of waves
Chapter 5 Superposition of waves
2
Superposition principle
At a given place and time, the net response
caused by two or more stimuli is the sum of the
responses which would have been caused by each
stimulus individually.
applies to any linear system
3
in a linear world, disturbances coexist without
causing further disturbance
4
Superposition of waves
If y1 and y2 are solutions to the wave equation,
5
Superposition of light waves
1
2
-in general, must consider orientation of vectors
(Chapter 7next week) -today, well treat
electric fields as scalars -strictly valid only
when individual E vectors are parallel -good
approximation for nearly parallel E
vectors -also works for unpolarized light
6
Light side of life
7
Nonlinear optics is another story
for another course, perhaps
8
What happens when two plane waves overlap?
9
Superposition of waves of same frequency
initial phase (at t0)
propagation distance (measured from reference
plane)
10
Superposition of waves of same frequency
simplify by intoducing constant phases
thus
.
At point P, phase difference is
hence the resultant electric field at P is
11
Superposition of waves of same frequency
constructive interference
destructive interference
in step
out of step
12
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13
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14
In between the extremes
constructive
destructive
general superposition
notice the amplitudes can vary its all about
the phase
15
General case of superposition
where
and
Expressed in complex form
Simplify with phasors
16
Phasors, not phasers
17
Phasor diagrams
E0
magnitude
a
angle
projection onto x-axis
clock analogy - time is a line - but time has
repeating nature - use circular, rotating
representation to track time
phasors -represent harmonic motion -complex
plane representation - use to track
waves -simplifies computational manipulations
18
Phasors in motion
http//resonanceswavesandfields.blogspot.com/2007/
08/phasors.html
19
Phasor diagrams
complex space representation vector addition
p - a2-a1
from law of cosines we get the amplitude of the
resultant field
20
Phasor diagrams
taking the tangent we get the phase of the
resultant field
21
Works for 2 waves, works for N waves
- harmonic waves -same frequency
22
Two important cases
for waves of equal amplitude and frequency
hence as
randomly phased
coherent
phase differences random
in phase all ai are equal
hence as
23
Lightbulb
Light from a light bulb is very complicated!
24
Coherent vs. Incoherent light
Incoherent light - relatively weak -
omni-directional - irradiance ? N
25
Coherence is a continuum
1
Coherent fixed phase relationship between the
electric field values at different locations or
at different times Partially coherent some
(although not perfect) correlation between phase
values Incoherent no correlation between
electric field values at different times or
locations
0
more on coherence next week
26
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27
Mixing the colors of light
28
How to make a pulse of light
29
Laser operating regimes
1. Single frequency
Intensity
Time
30
Standing waves
  • occur when wave exists in both forward and
    reverse directions
  • if phase shift p, standing wave is created
  • when A(x) 0, ER0 for all t these points are
    called nodes
  • displacemeent at nodes is always zero

A(x)
31
Standing wave anatomy
  • nodes occur when A(x) 0
  • - A(x) 0 when sinkx 0, or kx mp (for m
    0, 1, 2, ...)
  • - since k 2p/l, x ½ ml
  • - ER has maxima when coswt 1
  • - hence, peaks occur at t ½ mT (T is the
    period)

32
Standing waves in action
light
water
http//www.youtube.com/watch?v0M21_zCo6UM
sound
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vEQPMhwuYMy4
33
Superposition of waves of different frequency
a
b
wp
wg
kp
kg
34
Beats
Here, two cosine waves, with wp gtgt wg
35
Beats
The product of the two waves is depicted as
beat frequency
Phasor representation http//www.compadre.org/osp
/items/detail.cfm?ID8174
36
Acoustic analogy
2 frequencies
37
Phase and group velocity
phase velocity
group velocity
envelope moves with group velocity carrier wave
moves with phase velocity
38
Superposition and dispersion
of a waveform made of 100 cosines with different
frequencies
non-dispersive medium
dispersive medium
39
And the beat goes on
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vumrp1tIBY8Q
40
Exercises
You are encouraged to solve all problems in the
textbook (Pedrotti3). The following may be
covered in the werkcollege on 22 September
2010 Chapter 5 2, 6, 8, 9, 14, 18
(not part of your homework)
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