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| subject: | Re: ATM intersecting light |
From: "Vladimir Galogaza" To: "ATM shore" Reply-To: "Vladimir Galogaza" Original question was what happened when incoming beam of light and light deflected by secondary (in Newtonian) are crossing each other. >As others have mentioned, if you put a detector in the area where beams cross, >you would detect interference. I know of no such detector that will be able to detect interference in this case. Incoming light is not coherent. Quick and dirty calculation is that act of emission of light by electron jumping from one energy level to lower one last 10^-8 sec. In that time light travels 300000000 m/sec*10^-8 sec=3 m. Next 3 m long light wave will not be necessarily in phase with this one. So light from stars is bunch of incoherent waves coming in all phases. When they interfere with light waves crossing their path the interference will last maximum 10^-8 sec for two 3m long trains passing each other. If this interference was destructive at certain point next waves will be not necessarily destructive. So in order to see interference we should have very fast detector and the resulting field changes at each point will have all possible values in time ranging from zero to double amplitude for each two waves. And there are milliards of 3 m long wave trains with random phases. We can observe interference with eyes or some detectors only if interference is sufficiently stationary so that response time of detector can register it. This happens in interferometric tests when we are able to produce light of sufficient coherence in long time. Than we have sort of standing waves and film emulsion or other method can detect such electric fields. (This must be way off topic, Thanks Michael for patience.) Vladimir. --- BBBS/NT v4.00 MP* Origin: Email Gate (1:379/1.100) SEEN-BY: 633/267 270 @PATH: 379/1 633/267 |
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