University Physics with Modern Physics (14th Edition)
14th Edition
ISBN: 9780321973610
Author: Hugh D. Young, Roger A. Freedman
Publisher: PEARSON
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Concept explainers
Textbook Question
Chapter 35, Problem 35.18E
Coherent sources A and B emit
Expert Solution & Answer
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionStudents have asked these similar questions
A beam of light with an intensity of 40.0 W/m2 and polarization parallel to the y-axis is sent into a system of
two polarizing filters with transmission axes of 01 = 70.0° and 02 = 90.0° with respect to the y-axis. What is
the intensity of the light transmitted by the two-filter system?
y
O 4.13 W/m2
O 2.88 W/m2
O 3.29 W/m2
O 3.82 W/m?
O 4.63 W /m?
LASIK eye surgery uses pulses of laser light to shave off tissue from the cornea, reshaping it. A typical LASIK laser emits a 1.0-mmmm-diameter laser beam with a wavelength of 193 nmnm. Each laser pulse lasts 13 nsns and contains 1.1 mJmJ of light energy.
What is the power of one laser pulse?
During the very brief time of the pulse, what is the intensity of the light wave?
Two identical sources A and B emit in-phase plane radio waves with frequency 7.84E4 Hz and intensity 1.78E2 W/m2. A detector placed at location P closer to source B than source A detects a destructive interference. What is the intensity of the wave detected by the detector (in W/m2)?
Chapter 35 Solutions
University Physics with Modern Physics (14th Edition)
Ch. 35.1 - Consider a point in Fig. 35.3 on the positive...Ch. 35.2 - You shine a tunable laser (whose wavelength can be...Ch. 35.3 - A two-slit interference experiment uses coherent...Ch. 35.4 - A thin layer of benzene (n = 1.501) lies on top of...Ch. 35.5 - You are observing the pattern of fringes in a...Ch. 35 - A two-slit interference experiment is set up, and...Ch. 35 - Could an experiment similar to Youngs two-slit...Ch. 35 - Monochromatic coherent light passing through two...Ch. 35 - In a two-slit interference pattern on a distant...Ch. 35 - Would the headlights of a distant car form a...
Ch. 35 - The two sources S1 and S2 shown in Fig. 35.3 emit...Ch. 35 - Could the Young two-slit interference experiment...Ch. 35 - Coherent red light illuminates two narrow slits...Ch. 35 - Coherent light with wavelength falls on two...Ch. 35 - Prob. 35.10DQCh. 35 - If the monochromatic light shown in Fig. 35.5a...Ch. 35 - In using the superposition principle to calculate...Ch. 35 - Prob. 35.13DQCh. 35 - A very thin soap film (n = 1.33), whose thickness...Ch. 35 - Interference can occur in thin films. Why is it...Ch. 35 - If we shine while light on an air wedge like that...Ch. 35 - Prob. 35.17DQCh. 35 - When a thin oil film spreads out on a puddle of...Ch. 35 - Section 35.1 Interference and Coherent Sources...Ch. 35 - Two speakers that are 15.0 m apart produce...Ch. 35 - A radio transmitting station operating at a...Ch. 35 - Radio Interference. Two radio antennas A and B...Ch. 35 - Prob. 35.5ECh. 35 - Two light sources can be adjusted to emit...Ch. 35 - Section 35.2 Two-Source Interference of Light...Ch. 35 - Coherent light with wavelength 450 nm falls on a...Ch. 35 - Two slits spaced 0.450 mm apart are placed 75.0 cm...Ch. 35 - If the entire apparatus of Exercise 35.9 (slits,...Ch. 35 - Two thin parallel slits that are 0.0116 mm apart...Ch. 35 - Coherent light with wavelength 400 nm passes...Ch. 35 - Two very narrow slits are spaced 1.80 m apart and...Ch. 35 - Coherent light that contains two wavelengths. 660...Ch. 35 - Coherent light with wavelength 600 nm passes...Ch. 35 - Coherent light of frequency 6.32 1014 Hz passes...Ch. 35 - In a two-slit interference pattern, the intensity...Ch. 35 - Coherent sources A and B emit electromagnetic...Ch. 35 - Coherent light with wavelength 500 nm passes...Ch. 35 - Two slits spaced 0.260 mm apart are 0.900 m from a...Ch. 35 - Consider two antennas separated by 9.00 m that...Ch. 35 - Two slits spaced 0.0720 mm apart are 0.800 m from...Ch. 35 - What is the thinnest film of a coating with n =...Ch. 35 - Nonglare Glass. When viewing a piece of art that...Ch. 35 - Two rectangular pieces of plane glass are laid one...Ch. 35 - A place of glass 9.00 cm long is placed in contact...Ch. 35 - A uniform film of TiO2, 1036 nm thick and having...Ch. 35 - A plastic film with index of refraction 1.70 is...Ch. 35 - The walls of a soap bubble have about the same...Ch. 35 - A researcher measures the thickness of a layer of...Ch. 35 - Prob. 35.31ECh. 35 - What is the thinnest soap film (excluding the case...Ch. 35 - How far must the mirror M2 (see Fig. 35.19) of the...Ch. 35 - Jan first uses a Michelson interferometer with the...Ch. 35 - One round face of a 3.25-m, solid, cylindrical...Ch. 35 - Newtons rings are visible when a planoconvex lens...Ch. 35 - BIO Coating Eyeglass Lenses. Eyeglass lenses can...Ch. 35 - BIO Sensitive Eyes. After an eye examination, you...Ch. 35 - Two flat plates of glass with parallel faces are...Ch. 35 - In a setup similar to that of Problem 35.39, the...Ch. 35 - Suppose you illuminate two thin slits by...Ch. 35 - CP CALC A very thin sheet of brass contains two...Ch. 35 - Two radio antennas radiating in phase are located...Ch. 35 - Prob. 35.44PCh. 35 - CP A thin uniform film of refractive index 1.750...Ch. 35 - GPS Transmission. The GPS (Global Positioning...Ch. 35 - White light reflects at normal incidence from the...Ch. 35 - Laser light of wavelength 510 nm is traveling in...Ch. 35 - Red light with wavelength 700 nm is passed through...Ch. 35 - BIO Reflective Coatings and Herring. Herring and...Ch. 35 - After a laser beam passes through two thin...Ch. 35 - DATA In your summer job at an optics company, you...Ch. 35 - DATA Short-wave radio antennas A and B are...Ch. 35 - DATA In your research lab, a very thin, flat piece...Ch. 35 - CP The index of refraction of a glass rod is 1.48...Ch. 35 - CP Figure P35.56 shows an interferometer known as...Ch. 35 - INTERFERENCE AND SOUND WAVES. Interference occurs...Ch. 35 - The professor returns the apparatus to the...Ch. 35 - The professor again returns the apparatus to its...Ch. 35 - The professor once again returns the apparatus to...
Additional Science Textbook Solutions
Find more solutions based on key concepts
Define and discuss these terms: (a) synapsis, (b) bivalents, (c) chiasmata, (d) crossing over, (e) chromomeres,...
Concepts of Genetics (12th Edition)
1.1 Write a one-sentence definition for each of the following:
a. chemistry
b. chemical
Chemistry: An Introduction to General, Organic, and Biological Chemistry (13th Edition)
MAKE CONNECTIONS The gene that causes sickle-cell disease is present in a higher percentage of residents of su...
Campbell Biology (11th Edition)
55. A compact car has a mass of 1200 kg. When empty, the car bounces up and down on its springs 2.0 times per s...
College Physics: A Strategic Approach (3rd Edition)
The distances you obtained in Question 3 are for only one side of the ridge. Assuming that a ridge spreads equa...
Applications and Investigations in Earth Science (9th Edition)
Police Captain Jeffers has suffered a myocardial infarction. a. Explain to his (nonmedically oriented) family w...
Human Physiology: An Integrated Approach (8th Edition)
Knowledge Booster
Learn more about
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, physics and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.Similar questions
- How many helium atoms, each with a radius of about 31 pm, must be placed end to end to have a length equal to one wavelength of 470 nm blue light?arrow_forwardFigure P24.13 shows a plane electromagnetic sinusoidal wave propagating in the x direction. Suppose the wavelength is 50.0 m and the electric field vibrates in the xy plane with an amplitude of 22.0 V/m. Calculate (a) the frequency of the wave and (b) the magnetic field B when the electric field has its maximum value in the negative y direction. (c) Write an expression for B with the correct unit vector, with numerical values for Bmax, k, and , and with its magnitude in the form B=Bmaxcos(kxt) Figure P24.13 Problems 13 and 64.arrow_forwardTo save money on making military aircraft invisible to radar, an inventor decides to coat them with a nonreflective material having an index of refraction of 1.20, which is between that of air and the surface of the plane. This, he reasons, should be much cheaper than designing Stealth bombers. (a) What thickness should the coating be to inhibit the reflection of 4.00-cm wavelength radar? (b) What is unreasonable about this result? (c) Which assumptions are unreasonable or inconsistent?arrow_forward
- A circular radar antenna on a Coast Guard ship has a diameter of 2.10 m and radiates at a frequency of 18.0 GHz. Two small boats are located 5.00 km away from the ship. How close together could the boats be and still be detected as two objects?arrow_forwardThe intensity of a particular TV station’s signal is I =1.01 x 10^(-13) W/m^2 when it arrives at a 28-cm diameter satellite TV antenna. A) Calculate the total energy received by the antenna during 5.0 hours and 40 minutes of viewing this station’s programs. B)What is the amplitude of the field of the EM waves? (E field)arrow_forwardE14P7arrow_forward
- The GPS network consists of 24 satellites, each of which makes two orbits around the earth per day. Each satellite transmits a 50.0- W (or even less) sinusoidal electromagnetic signal at two frequencies, one of which is 1575.42 MHz. Assume that a satellite transmits half of its power at each frequency and that the waves travel uniformly in a downward hemisphere. Review | Constants What average intensity does a GPS receiver on the ground, directly below the satellite, receive? (Hint: First use Newton's laws to find the altitude of the satellite.) 15. ΑΣΦ ? I = W/m² Submit Request Answer Part B What is the amplitude of the electric field at the GPS receiver in part (a)? —| ΑΣΦ 2 Emaz = N/C Submit Request Answer Part C What is the amplitude of the magnetic field at the GPS receiver in part (a)?arrow_forwardA laser beam at a wavelength of 1.11 μm is coupled into an optic fiber, resulting in 138.2 mW of light inside the fiber initially. The fiber is 4.75 km long and has an absorption coefficienct of 1.562 dB/km. What light power, in mW, is at the end of the fiber?arrow_forwardIn a physics lab, light with wavelength 490 nm travels in air from a laser to a photocell in 17.0 ns. When a slab of glass 0.840 m thick is placed in the light beam, with the beam incident along the normal to the parallel faces of the slab, it takes the light 21.2 ns to travel from the laser to the photocell. What is the wavelength of the light in the glass?arrow_forward
- A dish antenna with a diameter of 20.0 m receives (at normal incidence) a radio signal from a distant source. The radio signal is a continuous sinusoidal wave with amplitude Emax = 0.20 mV/m. Assume the antenna absorbs all the radiation that falls on the dish. What is the power received by the antenna? O 2.25*10^-6 2.67 10^-5 O 3.65 10^-5 4.65 10^-5arrow_forwardTwo identical sources A and B emit in-phase plane radio waves with frequency 6.87E4 Hz and intensity 1.41E2 W/m2. A detector placed at location P closer to source B than source A detects a constructive interference. What is the intensity of the wave detected by the detector (in W/m2)?arrow_forwardThe range of visible light extends from 400 nm to 700 nm. What is the range of visible frequencies of light?arrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- University Physics Volume 3PhysicsISBN:9781938168185Author:William Moebs, Jeff SannyPublisher:OpenStaxCollege PhysicsPhysicsISBN:9781285737027Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris VuillePublisher:Cengage Learning
- Physics for Scientists and Engineers: Foundations...PhysicsISBN:9781133939146Author:Katz, Debora M.Publisher:Cengage LearningPrinciples of Physics: A Calculus-Based TextPhysicsISBN:9781133104261Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage Learning
University Physics Volume 3
Physics
ISBN:9781938168185
Author:William Moebs, Jeff Sanny
Publisher:OpenStax
College Physics
Physics
ISBN:9781285737027
Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris Vuille
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Physics for Scientists and Engineers: Foundations...
Physics
ISBN:9781133939146
Author:Katz, Debora M.
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Principles of Physics: A Calculus-Based Text
Physics
ISBN:9781133104261
Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Spectra Interference: Crash Course Physics #40; Author: CrashCourse;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-ob7foUzXaY;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY