Q28.In a Young's double slit experiment, an angular width of the fringe is 0. 35° on a screen placed at 2 m away for particular wavelength of 450 nm . The angular width of the fringe, when whole system is immersed in a medium of refractive index 7 , is 1 . The value of α is _____ . α 5
What This Question Tests
This question tests the calculation of angular fringe width in Young's double-slit experiment and its modification when the setup is immersed in a medium with a different refractive index.
Concepts Tested
Formulas Used
θ = λ/d
λ_medium = λ_air / μ
📚 NCERT Sections This Tests
10.4 — In A Young’S Double-Slit Experiment, The Slits Are Separated By
Physics Class 12 · Chapter 10
10.4 In a Young’s double-slit experiment, the slits are separated by 0.28 mm and the screen is placed 1.4 m away. The distance between the central bright fringe and the fourth bright fringe is measured to be 1.2 cm. Determine the wavelength of light used in the experiment.
10.5 — In Young’S Double-Slit Experiment Using Monochromatic Light Of
Physics Class 12 · Chapter 10
10.5 In Young’s double-slit experiment using monochromatic light of wavelength l, the intensity of light at a point on the screen where path difference is l, is K units. What is the intensity of light at a point where path difference is l/3?
9.31 — Figure 9.30 Shows An Equiconvex Lens (Of Refractive Index 1.50) In
Physics Class 12 · Chapter 9
9.31 Figure 9.30 shows an equiconvex lens (of refractive index 1.50) in contact with a liquid layer on top of a plane mirror. A small needle with its tip on the principal axis is moved along the axis until its inverted image is found at the position of the needle. The distance of the needle from the lens is measured to be 45.0cm. The liquid is removed and the experiment is repeated. The new distance is measured to be 30.0cm. What is the refractive index of the liquid? FIGURE 9.30 253 Reprint 2025-26 Physics Notes Reprint 2025-26 Wave Optics Chapter Ten WAVE OPTICS 10.1 INTRODUCTION In 1637 Descartes gave the corpuscular model of light and derived Snell’s law. It explained the laws of reflection and refraction of light at an interface. The corpuscular model predicted that if the ray of light (on refraction) bends towards the normal then the speed of light would be greater in the second medium. This corpuscular model of light was further developed by Isaac Newton in his famous book entitled OPTICKS and because of the tremendous popularity of this book, the corpuscular model is very often attributed to Newton. In 1678, the Dutch physicist Christiaan Huygens put forward the wave theory of light – it is this wave model of light that we will discuss in this chapter. As we will see, the wave model could satisfactorily explain the phenomena of reflection and refraction; however, it predicted that on refraction if the wave bends towards the normal then the speed of light would be less in the second medium. This is in contradiction to the prediction made by using the corpuscular model of light. It was much later confirmed by experiments where it was shown that the speed of light in water is less than the speed in air confirming the prediction of the wave model; Foucault carried out this experiment in 1850. The wave theory was not readily accepted primarily because of Newton’s authority and also because light could travel through vacuum255 Reprint 2025-26 Physics and it was felt that a wave would always require a medium to propagate from one point to the other. However, when Thomas Young performed his famous interference experiment in 1801, it was firmly established that light is indeed a wave phenomenon. The wavelength of visible light was measured and found to be extremely small; for example, the wavelength of yellow light is about 0.6 mm. Because of the smallness of the wavelength of visible light (in comparison to the dimensions of typical mirrors and lenses), light can be assumed to approximately travel in straight lines. This is the field of geometrical optics, which we had discussed in the previous chapter. Indeed, the branch of optics in which one completely neglects the finiteness of the wavelength is called geometrical optics and a ray is defined as the path of energy propagation in the limit of wavelength tending to zero. After the interference experiment of Young in 1801, for the next 40 years or so, many experiments were carried out involving the interference and diffraction of lightwaves; these experiments could only be satisfactorily explained by assuming a wave model of light. Thus, around the middle of the nineteenth century, the wave theory seemed to be very well established. The only major difficulty was that since it was thought that a wave required a medium for its propagation, how could light waves propagate through vacuum. This was explained when Maxwell put forward his famous electromagnetic theory of light. Maxwell had developed a set of equations describing the laws of electricity and magnetism and using these equations he derived what is known as the wave equation from which he predicted the existence of electromagnetic waves*. From the wave equation, Maxwell could calculate the speed of electromagnetic waves in free space and he found that the theoretical value was very close to the measured value of speed of light. From this, he propounded that light must be an electromagnetic wave. Thus, according to Maxwell, light waves are associated with changing electric and magnetic fields; changing electric field produces a time and space varying magnetic field and a changing magnetic field produces a time and space varying electric field. The changing electric and magnetic fields result in the propagation of electromagnetic waves (or light waves) even in vacuum. In this chapter we will first discuss the original formulation of the Huygens principle and derive the laws of reflection and refraction. In Sections 10.4 and 10.5, we will discuss the phenomenon of interference which is based on the principle of superposition. In Section 10.6 we will discuss the phenomenon of diffraction which is based on Huygens- Fresnel principle. Finally in Section 10.7 we will discuss the phenomenon of polarisation which is based on the fact that the light waves are transverse electromagnetic waves. * Maxwell had predicted the existence of electromagnetic waves around 1855; it was much later (around 1890) that Heinrich Hertz produced radiowaves in the laboratory. J.C. Bose and G. Marconi made practical applications of the Hertzian 256 waves Reprint 2025-26 Wave Optics
📋 Question Details
- Chapter
- Wave Optics
- Topic
- Young's Double Slit Experiment
- Year
- 2022
- Shift
- 28 Jun Shift 2
- Q Number
- Q28
- Type
- Numerical
- NCERT Ref
- Class 12 Physics Ch 10: Wave Optics
More from this Chapter
Q67.Wavelength of light used in an optical instrument are λ1 = 4000Å and λ2 = 5000Å, then ratio of their respective resolving powers (corresponding to λ1 and λ2 ) is (1) 16 : 25 (2) 9 : 1 (3) 4 : 5 (4) 5 : 4
Q66.To demonstrate the phenomenon of interference, we require two sources which emit radiation (1) of nearly the same frequency (2) of the same frequency (3) of different wavelengths (4) of the same frequency and having a definite phase relationship
Q66.The angle of incidence at which reflected light totally polarized for reflection from air to glass (refractive index n ), is (1) sin−1(n) (2) sin−1(1/n) (3) tan−1(1/n) (4) tan−1(n)
Q67.The maximum number of possible interference maxima for slit-separation equal to twice the wavelength in Young's double-slit experiment is (1) infinite (2) five (3) three (4) zero