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Very neat experiment!What do you think is happening at 1:24?What wavelength are you using?
My conclusion so far is that diffraction can occur if the penetration depth of the light through the obstacle is significantly more than the wavelength. In case of microwave on aluminum plate, the penetration depth is much lower than the wavelength. That's why diffraction effect can't be detected.
If my experiments posted in this thread don't convince people that diffraction and interference pattern formed in single slit experiment come from the edges instead of the space between them, I don't know what will.
Things are a bit different with the partial absorber. The diffracted wave interferes with scattered radiation through the plate, and produces a bright peak inside the shadow area
Likewise the paraffin wax block acts as a single edge and a scatter source. Bringing up the second block creates a second edge so you now have the beginning of a diffraction grating, which will produce bigger maxima and minima according to the grating equation mλ = d sinθ where d is the grating spacing, m is an integer, and in your case θ ≈ 30°. Note how you get a maximum when the edges area about λ/2 apart, and a minimum when they overlap by about λ.
Quote from: hamdani yusufIf my experiments posted in this thread don't convince people that diffraction and interference pattern formed in single slit experiment come from the edges instead of the space between them, I don't know what will.The distance between the edges is defined by the space between them.See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Negative_space
And I forgot to mention refraction! Paraffin wax doesn't just absorb and diffract a bit of the radiation, it also bends it.
https://news.mit.edu/2012/new-metamaterial-lens-focuses-radio-waves-1114 describes an interesting microwave lens that exploits the negative refractive index of a conductive metamaterial. This explains why the peaks of your metal-edge diffraction pattern appear on the "wrong" side of the beam central plane.
You can see the bending of light passing through a flat surface with your glass blocks. Obviously there is no displacement if the beam is perpendicular to the surface, but in the case of microwaves, your source was delivering a cone of radiation so the first encounter with the paraffin wax was at an angle of around 10 - 15 degrees to perpendicular.
Aluminium isn't a metamaterial but it is an excellent conductor, so one edge can display the properties of a metamaterial in a limited geometry.
Quote from: alancalverd on 29/08/2021 15:40:31Aluminium isn't a metamaterial but it is an excellent conductor, so one edge can display the properties of a metamaterial in a limited geometry.Or it's just a simple reflection by a convex surface located at the edge of the aluminum plate.
Unlikely to be significant - the wavelength is around 50 times the radius of any possible convexity! But the phenomenon you demonstrated is exactly what is predicted by a wavelet model of diffraction.
Single-edge diffraction produces a single bright peak outside the shadow of the edge - see https://sciencedemonstrations.fas.harvard.edu/presentations/edge-diffraction - and I think this is what you are seeing at 1:24. There is a secondary, much smaller peak around 1:25.