UNIVERSITY PHYSICS V.2 W/ACCESS >IC<
14th Edition
ISBN: 9781323631638
Author: YOUNG
Publisher: PEARSON C
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Textbook Question
Chapter 36, Problem 36.9E
Doorway Diffraction. Sound of frequency 1250 Hz leaves a room through a 1.00-m-wide doorway (see Exercise 36.5). At which angles relative to the centerline perpendicular to the doorway will someone outside the room hear no sound? Use 344 m/s for the speed of sound in air and assume that the source and listener are both far enough from the doorway for Fraunhofer diffraction to apply. You can ignore effects of reflections.
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Sound waves with frequency 2600 Hz and speed 343 m/s diffract through the rectangular opening of a speaker cabinet and into a large auditorium of length 100 m. The opening, which has a horizontal width of 38.7 cm, faces a wall 100 m away (the figure below).
Along that wall, how far from the central axis of that wall in meters will a listener be at the first diffraction minimum and thus have difficulty hearing the sound? (Neglect reflections.)
use the following values whenever necessary:
Acceleration of gravity g = 9.8 m/s².Density of water ρ = 1000 kg/m³Atmospheric pressure: pₐₜₘ = 101325 PaRefractive index of air nₐᵣ = 1
6) Light from a 620 nm wavelength laser passes through a diffraction grating with 4000 lines/cm in vacuum. The resulting pattern is seen on a far curved screen that can show all the bright bangs with direction up to, and including, ±90.0° from the center point. (a) What is the TOTAL number of bright bangs that will appear on the screen? (b) Now the system is immersed in a liquid and you notice that two more bright bangs appear, one above and one below. What is the minimum index of refraction of the liquid?
(a) 11 (b) n = 1.55
(a) 7 (b) n = 1.55
(a) 9 (b) n = 1.24
(a) 11 (b) n = 1.24
(a) 9 (b) n = 1.33
(a) 7 (b) n = 1.33
In a location where the speed of sound is 354 m/s, a 2.00 kHz sound wave impinges on two slits 30.0 cm apart. (a) At what angle is the first maximum located? (b) If the sound wave is replaced by 3.00 - cm microwaves, what slit separation gives the same angle for the first maximum? (c) If the slit separation is 1.00 mm, what frequency of light gives the same first maximum angle?
Chapter 36 Solutions
UNIVERSITY PHYSICS V.2 W/ACCESS >IC<
Ch. 36 - Why can we readily observe diffraction effects for...Ch. 36 - Prob. Q36.2DQCh. 36 - You use a lens of diameter D and light of...Ch. 36 - Light of wavelength and frequency f passes...Ch. 36 - In a diffraction experiment with waves of...Ch. 36 - An interference pattern is produced by four...Ch. 36 - Phasor Diagram for Eight Slits. An interference...Ch. 36 - A rainbow ordinarily shows a range of colors (see...Ch. 36 - Some loudspeaker horns for outdoor concerts (at...Ch. 36 - Figure 31.12 (Section 31.2) shows a loudspeaker...
Ch. 36 - Prob. Q36.11DQCh. 36 - With which color of light can the Hubble Space...Ch. 36 - At the end of Section 36.4, the following...Ch. 36 - Prob. Q36.14DQCh. 36 - Why is a diffraction grating better than a...Ch. 36 - One sometimes sees rows of evenly spaced radio...Ch. 36 - Prob. Q36.17DQCh. 36 - Prob. Q36.18DQCh. 36 - Ordinary photographic film reverses black and...Ch. 36 - Monochromatic light from a distant source is...Ch. 36 - Parallel rays of green mercury light with a...Ch. 36 - Light of wavelength 585 nm falls on a slit 0.0666...Ch. 36 - Light of wavelength 633 nm from a distant source...Ch. 36 - Diffraction occurs for all types of waves,...Ch. 36 - CP Tsunami! On December 26, 2004, a violent...Ch. 36 - Prob. 36.7ECh. 36 - Monochromatic electromagnetic radiation with...Ch. 36 - Doorway Diffraction. Sound of frequency 1250 Hz...Ch. 36 - Figure 31.12 (Section 31.2) shows a loudspeaker...Ch. 36 - Red light of wavelength 633 nm from a helium neon...Ch. 36 - Public Radio station KXPR-FM in Sacramento...Ch. 36 - Monochromatic light of wavelength 580 nm passes...Ch. 36 - Monochromatic light of wavelength = 620 nm from a...Ch. 36 - A slit 0.240 mm wide is illuminated by parallel...Ch. 36 - Monochromatic light of wavelength 592 nm from a...Ch. 36 - A single-slit diffraction pattern is formed by...Ch. 36 - Parallel rays of monochromatic light with...Ch. 36 - Number of Fringes in a Diffraction Maximum. In...Ch. 36 - Diffraction and Interference Combined. Consider...Ch. 36 - An interference pattern is produced by light of...Ch. 36 - Laser light of wavelength 500.0 nm illuminates two...Ch. 36 - When laser light of wavelength 632.8 nm passes...Ch. 36 - Monochromatic light is at normal incidence on a...Ch. 36 - If a diffraction grating produces its third-order...Ch. 36 - If a diffraction grating produces a third-order...Ch. 36 - Visible light passes through a diffraction grating...Ch. 36 - The wavelength range of the visible spectrum is...Ch. 36 - (a) What is the wavelength of light that is...Ch. 36 - CDs and DVDs as Diffraction Gratings. A laser beam...Ch. 36 - A typical laboratory diffraction grating has 5.00 ...Ch. 36 - Identifying Isotopes by Spectra. Different...Ch. 36 - The light from an iron arc includes many different...Ch. 36 - If the planes of a crystal are 3.50 (1 = 1010 m...Ch. 36 - Prob. 36.35ECh. 36 - Monochromatic x rays are incident on a crystal for...Ch. 36 - Monochromatic light with wavelength 620 nm passes...Ch. 36 - Monochromatic light with wavelength 490 nm passes...Ch. 36 - Two satellites at an altitude of 1200 km are...Ch. 36 - BIO If you can read the bottom row of your doctors...Ch. 36 - The VLBA (Very Long Baseline Array) uses a number...Ch. 36 - Searching for Planets Around Other Stars. If an...Ch. 36 - Hubble Versus Arecibo. The Hubble Space Telescope...Ch. 36 - Photography. A wildlife photographer uses a...Ch. 36 - Observing Jupiter. You are asked to design a space...Ch. 36 - Coherent monochromatic light of wavelength passes...Ch. 36 - BIO Thickness of Human Hair. Although we have...Ch. 36 - CP A loudspeaker with a diaphragm that vibrates at...Ch. 36 - Laser light of wavelength 632.8 nm falls normally...Ch. 36 - Grating Design. Your boss asks you to design a...Ch. 36 - Measuring Refractive Index. A thin slit...Ch. 36 - Underwater Photography. An underwater camera has a...Ch. 36 - CALC The intensity of light in the Fraunhofer...Ch. 36 - A slit 0.360 mm wide is illuminated by parallel...Ch. 36 - CP CALC In a large vacuum chamber, monochromatic...Ch. 36 - CP In a laboratory, light from a particular...Ch. 36 - What is the longest wavelength that can be...Ch. 36 - It has been proposed to use an array of infrared...Ch. 36 - A diffraction grating has 650 slits/mm. What is...Ch. 36 - Quasars, an abbreviation for quasi-stellar radio...Ch. 36 - A glass sheet is covered by a very thin opaque...Ch. 36 - BIO Resolution of the Eye. The maximum resolution...Ch. 36 - DATA While researching the use of laser pointers,...Ch. 36 - DATA Your physics study partner tells you that the...Ch. 36 - DATA At the metal fabrication company where you...Ch. 36 - Intensity Pattern of N Slits. (a) Consider an...Ch. 36 - CALC Intensity Pattern of N Silts, Continued. Part...Ch. 36 - CALC It is possible to calculate the intensity in...Ch. 36 - Prob. 36.69PPCh. 36 - BRAGG REFLECTION ON A DIFFERENT SCALE. A colloid...Ch. 36 - BRAGG REFLECTION ON A DIFFERENT SCALE. A colloid...
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- Consider the double-slit arrangement shown in Figure P37.60, where the slit separation is d and the distance from the slit to the screen is L. A sheet of transparent plastic having an index of refraction n and thickness t is placed over the upper slit. As a result, the central maximum of the interference pattern moves upward a distance y Find y.arrow_forwardIn the double-slit arrangement of Figure P36.13, d = 0.150 mm, L = 140 cm, = 643 nm. and y = 1.80 cm. (a) What is the path difference for the rays from the two slits arriving at P? (b) Express this path difference in terms of . (c) Does P correspond to a maximum, a minimum, or an intermediate condition? Give evidence for your answer. Figure P36.13arrow_forwardA Fraunhofer diffraction pattern is produced on a screen located 1.00 m from a single slit. If a light source of wavelength 5.00 107 m is used and the distance from the center of the central bright fringe to the first dark fringe is 5.00 103 m, what is the slit width? (a) 0.010 0 mm (b) 0.100 mm (c) 0.200 mm (d) 1.00 mm (e) 0.005 00 mmarrow_forward
- Newtons rings, discovered by Isaac Newton, are an interference pattern of dark and bright rings formed because of the air gap of increasing thickness w between a spherical surface and an adjoining flat surface (Example 36.2). Figure P36.55 shows a Newtons rings apparatus with a plano-convex lens with radius of curvature R atop a flat glass slab, both with index of refraction nglass. In the configuration shown, the seventh bright fringe has a radius of 1.10 cm. After the air gap in the apparatus is filled with an unknown liquid, the radius of the seventh fringe decreases to 0.968 cm. What is the index of refraction of the unknown liquid? FIGURE P36.55arrow_forwardRed light of wavelength of 700 nm falls on a double slit separated by 400 nm. (a) At what angle is the first-order maximum in the diffraction pattern? (b) What is unreasonable about this result? (c) Which assumptions are unreasonable or inconsistent?arrow_forward(a) Find the angle between the first minima for the two sodium vapor lines, which have wavelengths of 589.1 and 589.6 nm, when they fall upon a single slit of width 2.00 m. (b) What is the distance between these minima if the diffraction pattern falls on a screen 1.00 m from the slit? (c) Discuss the ease or difficulty of measuring such a distance.arrow_forward
- Suppose Youngs double-slit experiment is performed in air using red light and then the apparatus is immersed in water. What happens to the interference pattern on the screen? (a) It disappears. (b) The bright and dark fringes stay in the same locations, but the contrast is reduced. (c) The bright fringes are closer together. (d) The bright fringes are farther apart. (e) No change happens in the interference pattern.arrow_forwardAn effect analogous to two-slit interference can occur with sound waves, instead of light. In an open field, two speakers placed 1.30 m apart are powered by a single-function generator producing sine waves at 1200-Hz frequency. A student walks along a line 12.5 m away and parallel to the line between the speakers. She hears an alternating pattern of loud and quiet, due to constructive and destructive interference. What is (a) the wavelength of this sound and (b) the distance between the central maximum and the first maximum (loud) position along this line?arrow_forward
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