Apr 23, 2025 03:24 AM
(This post was last modified: Apr 23, 2025 03:34 AM by confused2.)
Sorry I can't get the youtube links to work without adverts .. the link does come (eventually)
I stumbled on a girl doing what I think is a fairly well presented double slit 'thing'. This might not be new to others so a quick run through (she's glacial). Laser. Two slits. Shows double slit interference. Polarizing filters at 90 degrees before each slit which identifies which slit the light came through .. Shows no interference. NOW .. put a polarising filter at 45 degrees AFTER the slits .. and show that the interference comes back.
'Normal' double slit interference
The big bright patches are due to the width of each slit. The narrower fringes are due to the distance between the slits - this is how we know which is which.
https://youtu.be/sAm7iVdAvTA?t=128
Interference pattern with polarising filters at 90 degrees .. no double slit interference
https://youtu.be/sAm7iVdAvTA?t=478
Interference pattern due to width of slit with one slit covered
https://youtu.be/sAm7iVdAvTA?t=517
Here she puts a polarising filter at 45 degrees AFTER the slits and gets the double slit interference back.
https://youtu.be/sAm7iVdAvTA?t=755
Full video here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sAm7iVdAvTA
Bearing in mind that I am an 'armchair physicist'..
I've looked through the comments so I'll try to pre-empt some of them.
This is a single photon experiment but with lots of them. Individual photons only interact with themselves - it is possible to entangle photons but that has nothing to do with what we're seeing here. The brightness of a pixel in a camera (or eye) is the result of the number of photons detected and has fuck all to do with waves.
I stumbled on a girl doing what I think is a fairly well presented double slit 'thing'. This might not be new to others so a quick run through (she's glacial). Laser. Two slits. Shows double slit interference. Polarizing filters at 90 degrees before each slit which identifies which slit the light came through .. Shows no interference. NOW .. put a polarising filter at 45 degrees AFTER the slits .. and show that the interference comes back.
'Normal' double slit interference
The big bright patches are due to the width of each slit. The narrower fringes are due to the distance between the slits - this is how we know which is which.
https://youtu.be/sAm7iVdAvTA?t=128
Interference pattern with polarising filters at 90 degrees .. no double slit interference
https://youtu.be/sAm7iVdAvTA?t=478
Interference pattern due to width of slit with one slit covered
https://youtu.be/sAm7iVdAvTA?t=517
Here she puts a polarising filter at 45 degrees AFTER the slits and gets the double slit interference back.
https://youtu.be/sAm7iVdAvTA?t=755
Full video here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sAm7iVdAvTA
Bearing in mind that I am an 'armchair physicist'..
I've looked through the comments so I'll try to pre-empt some of them.
This is a single photon experiment but with lots of them. Individual photons only interact with themselves - it is possible to entangle photons but that has nothing to do with what we're seeing here. The brightness of a pixel in a camera (or eye) is the result of the number of photons detected and has fuck all to do with waves.
