Concept explainers
(a)
The longest wavelength that interfere constructively.
(a)
Answer to Problem 61AP
The longest wavelength that interfere constructively is
Explanation of Solution
Write the expression to find the distance that the ray travels from the top of the transmitter to the ground.
Here,
Write the expression for the phase shift between the two waves.
Here,
Conclusion:
Substitute
Substitute
Rewrite the above equation to find the wavelength.
Substitute
Therefore, the longest wavelength that interfere constructively is
(b)
The longest wavelength that interfere destructively .
(b)
Answer to Problem 61AP
The longest wavelength that interfere destructively is
Explanation of Solution
Write the expression to find the distance that the ray travels from the top of the transmitter to the ground.
Here,
Write the expression for the phase shift between the two waves.
Here,
Conclusion:
Substitute
Substitute
Rewrite the above equation to find the wavelength.
Substitute
Therefore, the longest wavelength that interfere destructively is
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Chapter 37 Solutions
Bundle: Physics for Scientists and Engineers with Modern Physics, Loose-leaf Version, 9th + WebAssign Printed Access Card, Multi-Term
- Two antennas located at points A and B are broadcasting radio waves of frequency 104.0 MHz. The signals start in phase with each other. The two antennas are separated by a distance d = 8.7 m. An observer is located at point P on the x axis, a distance x = 110.0 m from antenna A. The points A, P, and B form a right triangle. What is the phase difference between the waves arriving at P from antennas A and B? Enter your answer in radiansarrow_forwardTwo antennas located at points A and B are broadcasting radio waves of frequency 96.0 MHz, perfectly in phase with each other. The two antennas are separated by a distance d= 6.20 m. An observer, P, is located on the x axis, a distance x= 84.0 m from antenna A, so that APB forms a right triangle with PB as hypotenuse. What is the phase difference between the waves arriving at P from antennas A and B? A P X B 4.594x10-¹ rad Computer's answer now shown above. You are correct. Your receipt no. is 158-6031 > Previous Tries Now observer P walks along the x axis toward antenna A. What is P's distance from A when he first observes fully destructive interference between the two waves? 1.203 m As P gets closer A, the path length difference gets larger. What's the smallest path length difference that gives destructive interference? Submit Answer Tries 0/6 Submit Answer Incorrect. Tries 1/6 Previous Tries If observer P continues walking until he reaches antenna A, at how many places along the x…arrow_forwardAn engineer, investigating the behavior of radio waves, builds a box 7.20 m long. Inside the box at one end is a small radio transmitter that emits radiation with a wavelength of 0.120 m. A receiver is placed at the other end, 7.20 m away. Assume both the transmitter and the receiver are on the floor of the box. The walls and floor of the box interior are treated to minimize reflection of radio waves. The ceiling of the box interior, however, is metal, so the radio waves can reflect off of it almost perfectly. The radio waves can take two paths from the transmitter to the receiver: a straight-line path, and a path that reflects off the ceiling of the box interior. Note that there is a phase shift when the waves reflect off the ceiling. (a) What is the minimum (nonzero) height of the box ceiling (in m) that could produce destructive interference between the direct and reflected waves at the receiver's location? (b) What If? Some modern Wi-Fi antennas emit frequencies in the 5 GHz band.…arrow_forward
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- A flat piece of glass is held stationary and horizontal above the highly polished, flat top end of a 8.50-cm-long vertical metal rod that has its lower end rigidly fixed. The thin film of air between the rod and glass is observed to be bright by reflected light when it is illuminated by light of wavelength 530 nm. As the temperature is slowly increased by 21.5°C, the film changes from bright to dark and back to bright 200 times. What is the coefficient of linear expansion of the metal? °c-1arrow_forwardA thin glass plate (n=1.56) rests on a small pool of water (n=1.333). Light is incident from air onto the surface of the glass plate. Red light of wavelength 680nm (in air) is observed to be most strongly reflected from the glass. What are the three thinnest possible thicknesses of the glass plate?arrow_forwardThe plane z = 0 separates two media: glass(nglass = 1.51 for z < 0) and water (nH20 = 1.33 for z > 0). The optical beam of a helium-cadmium (He-Cd) laser has a wavelength in vacuum of 325 nm. Consider that the laser beam propagates in the x-z plane from the glass side towards the glass/water interface at an angle of incidence of 30° (angle between the incident beam and the normal to the interface). Determine the Cartesian components of the k-vector (kx, ky, kz) for the incident reflected, and transmitted beams.arrow_forward
- Very short pulses of high intensity laser beams are used to repair detached portions of the retina of the eye. The brief pulses of energy absorbed by the retina welds the detached portion back into place. In one such procedure, a laser beam has a wavelength of 810 nm and delivers 250 mW of power spread over a circular spot 510 micrometers in diameter. The vitreous humor (the transparent fluid that fills most of the eye) has an index of refraction of 1.34. (A) what average pressure would the pulse of the laser beam exert at normal incidence on a surface in air if the beam is fully absorbed? (B) what is the wavelength of the laser light inside the vitreous humor of the eye? (C) what is the frequency of the laser light inside the vitreous humor of the eye?arrow_forwardThe pupil of an eagle’s eye has a diameter of 6.0 mm. Two field mice are separated by 0.010 m. From a distance of 202 m, the eagle sees them as one unresolved object and dives toward them at a speed of 15 m/s. Assume that the eagle’s eye detects light that has a wavelength of 550 nm in vacuum. How much time passes until the eagle sees the mice as separate objects?arrow_forwardTwo sources are emitting coherent, monochromatic EM waves with a wavelength of 2 cm in air. Source 1 is embedded in a material with index of refraction n1 = 1.5. The distance between source 1 and the edge of the material is 6 cm. You can assume nair = 1. At the point marked with an X, which is 9 cm from source 2 and 3 cm from the edge of the material that source 1 is embedded inside, what kind of interference will you find between EM waves from the two sources? Group of answer choices Destructive Constructivearrow_forward
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