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You have made the usual textbook errors of assuming Huygens' infinite array of spherical wavelets then attempting to represent it with ray propagation of truncated wavefronts.
Quote from: alancalverd on 01/01/2023 14:10:43Yes, because it does.As I've shown, it predicts diffraction.How do you explain half interference pattern that I have shown in another thread?
Yes, because it does.As I've shown, it predicts diffraction.
Quote from: alancalverd on 29/12/2022 00:20:40Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 16/06/2022 07:54:52Quote from: alancalverd on 14/06/2022 18:15:23Frequently. I am a physicist.It looks like we are lucky to have a physicist on board. I'd like to hear what you think about this problem.Or may be you know someone who is more suitable to give an answer.Apologies for picking this up so late in the discussion. Please remind me which problem? Here. See the pattern shown in 0:07. Do you have a better explanation?Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 05/10/2021 14:05:26Here's my newest video investigating diffraction of light by producing single side interference pattern.//www.youtube.com/watch?v=L94qwHUNoUY
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 16/06/2022 07:54:52Quote from: alancalverd on 14/06/2022 18:15:23Frequently. I am a physicist.It looks like we are lucky to have a physicist on board. I'd like to hear what you think about this problem.Or may be you know someone who is more suitable to give an answer.Apologies for picking this up so late in the discussion. Please remind me which problem?
Quote from: alancalverd on 14/06/2022 18:15:23Frequently. I am a physicist.It looks like we are lucky to have a physicist on board. I'd like to hear what you think about this problem.Or may be you know someone who is more suitable to give an answer.
Frequently. I am a physicist.
Here's my newest video investigating diffraction of light by producing single side interference pattern.//www.youtube.com/watch?v=L94qwHUNoUY
Do you know Lloyd's mirror?
The Lloyd mirror effect has been implicated as having an important role in explaining why marine animals such as manatees and whales have been repeatedly hit by boats and ships. Interference due to Lloyd's mirror results in low frequency propeller sounds not being discernible near the surface, where most accidents occur.
Is there unusual textbook that doesn't make the same error?
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 04/01/2023 08:13:24Do you know Lloyd's mirror?Wikipedia gives a good summary buut rather overcooks it, I feel:QuoteThe Lloyd mirror effect has been implicated as having an important role in explaining why marine animals such as manatees and whales have been repeatedly hit by boats and ships. Interference due to Lloyd's mirror results in low frequency propeller sounds not being discernible near the surface, where most accidents occur.Manatees and whales are mammals so come to the surface to breathe, and also to catch pelagic prey. Ships are also mostly on the surface. Where else could they possibly collide? But I digress. The ray construction shows that photons can arrive at a given point via two different path lengths, but doesn't imply interference because it would be equally applicable to particles as to waves. There is no mechanism for the destructive interference of particles.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lloyd%27s_mirrorLloyd's mirror is an optics experiment that was first described in 1834 by Humphrey Lloyd in the Transactions of the Royal Irish Academy.[1] Its original goal was to provide further evidence for the wave nature of light, beyond those provided by Thomas Young and Augustin-Jean Fresnel. In the experiment, light from a monochromatic slit source reflects from a glass surface at a small angle and appears to come from a virtual source as a result. The reflected light interferes with the direct light from the source, forming interference fringes.[2][3] It is the optical wave analogue to a sea interferometer.[4]
The reason I mentioned this experiment is to provide an example where interference occurs without involving diffraction
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 05/01/2023 04:32:34The reason I mentioned this experiment is to provide an example where interference occurs without involving diffractionI think we agreed on that a long while ago! I also mentioned interference between independent but synchronised radio sources used for long range navigation, and the problems caused by edge diffraction of a homing beacon, with no interference.But the fact remains that mixing ray optics with wave models in a textbook can lead to some serious confusion.
The same way that you explain calculate everything else to which Huygens applies.I repeat for the nth time, Huygens is a mathematical model, not an explanation.
Yes. All you have to do is conduct an experiment whose results are not correctly predicted by the Huygens model. Your report is eagerly awaited!
Quote from: alancalverd on 06/01/2023 08:09:09Yes. All you have to do is conduct an experiment whose results are not correctly predicted by the Huygens model. Your report is eagerly awaited!What does it predict, exactly? Does it predict half interference pattern? Does it predict polarized single slit diffraction?
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 07/01/2023 12:50:25Quote from: alancalverd on 06/01/2023 08:09:09Yes. All you have to do is conduct an experiment whose results are not correctly predicted by the Huygens model. Your report is eagerly awaited!What does it predict, exactly? Does it predict half interference pattern? Does it predict polarized single slit diffraction? Do you really not understand that those questions were asked when Huygens put the idea forward and, if it hadn't worked, the idea would have been discarded?
Quote from: Bored chemist on 07/01/2023 13:51:52Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 07/01/2023 12:50:25Quote from: alancalverd on 06/01/2023 08:09:09Yes. All you have to do is conduct an experiment whose results are not correctly predicted by the Huygens model. Your report is eagerly awaited!What does it predict, exactly? Does it predict half interference pattern? Does it predict polarized single slit diffraction? Do you really not understand that those questions were asked when Huygens put the idea forward and, if it hadn't worked, the idea would have been discarded?Do you have any reference? Should we take your words for granted?
So, that's a "No".You do not understand how science works.
Have you considered learning?You are asking me to find a published record of someone saying "yes, it still works".Why would anyone bother to publish that?
I'm not asking you to take my word for anything.I'm saying that, in the last 300 years or more, plenty of people* have compared the calculation with the experiments and found that Huygens' construction works (within it's field of applicability).
Some theories which survived for thousands years turned out to be false.
In order to say "yes, it still works", there should be a record showing that it did work in the first time.
Because, if they had found that it didn't work they would be famous as "the guy who proved Huygens was wrong.".Do you really not see that?* and I mean clever people- not you and me.
Feynman defines the generalized principle in the following way:"Actually Huygens’ principle is not correct in optics. It is replaced by Kirchoff’s [sic] modification which requires that both the amplitude and its derivative must be known on the adjacent surface. This is a consequence of the fact that the wave equation in optics is second order in the time. The wave equation of quantum mechanics is first order in the time; therefore, Huygens’ principle is correct for matter waves, action replacing time."https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Huygens%E2%80%93Fresnel_principle#Generalized_Huygens'_principle
The limitations of Huygens Wave Theory of Light are as follows:It could not explain rectilinear propagation of lightIt could not explain phenomenon of polarisation of light and phenomenon like Compton Effect, photoelectric effect.https://www.toppr.com/ask/content/concept/drawbacks-of-huygens-wave-theory-210352/
Huygens’ principle failed to provide reasons for wave propagation in backward directions.The principle failed to explain the rectilinear propagation of light.It also failed to prove the concept of polarisation of light, emission of light, absorption of light, and the photoelectric effect. (Source: https://protonstalk.com/light/huygens-principle/#Limitations)https://protonstalk.com/light/huygens-principle/#Limitations