Fig. 35-43, light is incident perpendicularly on a thin layer of material 2 that lies between (thicker) materials 1 and 3. (The rays are tilted only for clarity.) Part of the light ends up in material 3 as ray r 3 (the light does not reflect inside material 2) and r 4 (the light reflects twice inside material 2). The waves of r 3 and r 4 interfere, and here we consider the type of interference to be either maximum (max) or minimum (min). For this situation, each problem in Table 35-3 refers to the indexes of refraction n 1 , n 2 , and n 3 , the type of interference, the thin-layer thickness L in nanometers, and the wavelength ๐ in nanometers of the light as measured in air. Where ๐ is missing, give the wavelength that is in the visible range. Where L is missing, give the second least thickness or the third least thickness as indicated. Figure 35-45 n 1 n 2 n 3 Type L ๐ 61 1.32 1.75 1.39 Min 325 62 1.68 1.59 1.50 Max 2nd 342 63 1.40 1.46 1.75 Max 2nd 482 64 1.40 1.46 1.75 Max 210 65 1.60 1.40 1.80 Min 2nd 632 Table 35-3: Transmission Through Thin Layers.
Fig. 35-43, light is incident perpendicularly on a thin layer of material 2 that lies between (thicker) materials 1 and 3. (The rays are tilted only for clarity.) Part of the light ends up in material 3 as ray r 3 (the light does not reflect inside material 2) and r 4 (the light reflects twice inside material 2). The waves of r 3 and r 4 interfere, and here we consider the type of interference to be either maximum (max) or minimum (min). For this situation, each problem in Table 35-3 refers to the indexes of refraction n 1 , n 2 , and n 3 , the type of interference, the thin-layer thickness L in nanometers, and the wavelength ๐ in nanometers of the light as measured in air. Where ๐ is missing, give the wavelength that is in the visible range. Where L is missing, give the second least thickness or the third least thickness as indicated. Figure 35-45 n 1 n 2 n 3 Type L ๐ 61 1.32 1.75 1.39 Min 325 62 1.68 1.59 1.50 Max 2nd 342 63 1.40 1.46 1.75 Max 2nd 482 64 1.40 1.46 1.75 Max 210 65 1.60 1.40 1.80 Min 2nd 632 Table 35-3: Transmission Through Thin Layers.
Fig. 35-43, light is incident perpendicularly on a thin layer of material 2 that lies between (thicker) materials 1 and 3. (The rays are tilted only for clarity.) Part of the light ends up in material 3 as ray
r
3
(the light does not reflect inside material 2) and
r
4
(the light reflects twice inside material 2). The waves of
r
3
and
r
4
interfere, and here we consider the type of interference to be either maximum (max) or minimum (min). For this situation, each problem in Table 35-3 refers to the indexes of refraction
n
1
,
n
2
, and
n
3
, the type of interference, the thin-layer thickness L in nanometers, and the wavelength ๐ in nanometers of the light as measured in air. Where ๐ is missing, give the wavelength that is in the visible range. Where L is missing, give the second least thickness or the third least thickness as indicated.
1. Consult the form of the x-direction Navier-Stokes equation below that we discussed in
class. (For this problem, only the x direction equation is shown for simplicity). Note that
the equation provided is for a Cartesian coordinate system. In the spaces below, indicate
which of the following assumptions would allow you to eliminate a term from the
equation. If one of the assumptions provided would not allow you to eliminate a
particular term, write "none" in the space provided.
du
ะดะธ
at
( + + + ๋งค์ผ)
du
ะดะธ
=
-
Pgx
dy
ะดั
dx
ยฒu
Fu
u
+ fl
+
ax2 ayยฒ
az2
-
ะดั
-
ฦz
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Assumption
Flow is in the horizontal direction (e.g. patient lying
on hospital bed)
Flow is unidirectional in the x-direction
Steady flow
We consider the flow to be between two flat,
infinitely wide plates
There is no pressure gradient
Flow is axisymmetric
Term(s) in equation
Don't use ai to answer I will report you answer
why did the expert subtract the force exerted by the hand and the elbow by the force due to the weight of the hand and forearm and force exerted by the tricep. Does the order matter and how do you determine what to put first. Question 4 AP, CHAPTER 13 FROM BASIC BIOMECHANICS 8TH EDITION
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