Consider a two-slit interference arrangement (see figure) such that the distance of the screen from the slits is half the distance between the slits. Obtain the value of $D$ in terms of $\lambda$ such that the first minima on the screen falls at a distance $D$ from the centre $O$.

Vedclass pdf generator app on play store
Vedclass iOS app on app store
(D) The situation described is depicted in the figure. According to the problem,the distance of the screen from the slits is $D$,and the distance between the slits is $d$. We are given that $D = d/2$,which implies $d = 2D$.
The path difference between the waves superposing at point $P$ is given by $\Delta x = r_2 - r_1 = S_2P - S_1P$.
From the geometry of the figure:
$S_2P = \sqrt{D^2 + (d/2 + D)^2} = \sqrt{D^2 + (D + D)^2} = \sqrt{D^2 + 4D^2} = \sqrt{5}D$.
$S_1P = \sqrt{D^2 + (d/2 - D)^2} = \sqrt{D^2 + (D - D)^2} = D$.
Therefore,the path difference is $\Delta x = \sqrt{5}D - D = D(\sqrt{5} - 1)$.
For the first order minima (destructive interference),the condition is $\Delta x = \frac{\lambda}{2}$.
Equating the two expressions:
$D(\sqrt{5} - 1) = \frac{\lambda}{2}$.
$D = \frac{\lambda}{2(\sqrt{5} - 1)}$.
Using $\sqrt{5} \approx 2.236$:
$D = \frac{\lambda}{2(2.236 - 1)} = \frac{\lambda}{2(1.236)} = \frac{\lambda}{2.472} \approx 0.404\lambda$.

Explore More

Similar Questions

The path difference between two interfering waves at a point on the screen is $\frac{\lambda}{8}$. The ratio of intensity at this point and that at the central fringe will be

Difficult
View Solution

In a Young's double slit experiment,the intensity at a point is $\left(\frac{1}{4}\right)^{\text{th}}$ of the maximum intensity. The minimum distance of the point from the central maximum is . . . . . . . . $\mu m$.
(Given: $\lambda = 600 \ nm, d = 1.0 \ mm, D = 1.0 \ m$)

The intensity ratio of the two interfering beams of light is $\beta$. What is the value of $\frac{I_{\max} - I_{\min}}{I_{\max} + I_{\min}}$?

Difficult
View Solution

In Young's double-slit experiment,the intensity at a point where the path difference is $\lambda / 6$ is $I'$. If $I_0$ denotes the maximum intensity,then $I'/I_0$ is equal to

Difficult
View Solution

Waves emitted from two identical sources produce an intensity of $K$ units at a point on the screen. If the path difference between these two waves is $\lambda$,calculate the intensity at a point on the screen where the path difference is $\lambda/4$.

Difficult
View Solution

Vedclass Products

For Students

Vedclass Test Series

Mock tests in real JEE/NEET style with performance analysis. 5-day free trial.

Start Free Trial
For Teachers

Exam Paper Generator

Generate Set A/B/C/D exam papers from 7.5L+ questions in 2 minutes. 3 chapters free.

Try Free
For Institutes

Online Exam Module

Live online exams with unlimited students, 360° analytics & white-label branding.

See Demo