How Light Wave Interference Works - podcast episode cover

How Light Wave Interference Works

May 23, 20143 min
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Episode description

When white light hits a film of oil floating on water, most of it passes through the film, but some of the light is reflected off the top and bottom layers of the film. Check out this HowStuffWorks podcast to learn more about light wave interference.

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Brain Stuff is sponsored by Harry's dot com. Get a great shaving experience for a fraction of the price. The quality of the shave is so important that Harry's purchased the factory that makes their blades. Fifteen dollars gets you a set that includes a handle, three blades, and shave cream. Go to Harry's dot com use the code brain stuff to say five dollars off your first purchase. Welcome to brain Stuff from how stuff works dot com where smart

happens him Marshall brain. It's very common to see rainbow patterns when you look at the surface of a c D and also when you look at soap bubbles or a thin film of oil floating on still water. Where do these colors come from? All three of these rainbow effects are created when light waves interact with each other. It's known as constructive and destructive interference of the light hitting thin surfaces. Think about a very thin film of

oil floating on water as an example. When white light hits the film, most of it passes through the film, but some is reflected off the top and bottom layers of the film. In the same way. When you stand in front of a window in your house, you can see a reflected image in the window. Most of the light is passing through the window and out of the house,

but some is reflected back at you. The light that reflects off the top layer of a film of oil travels slightly shorter distances than the light reflecting off the bottom layer. If the film is very thin on the order of the wavelength of light, then interference can occur.

Violet light has a wavelength of about four thousand angstroms, and angstrom is a hundred millions of a centimeter, while red light has a wavelength of about seven thousand, six hundred angstroms, so we are talking about extremely thinned films.

If the film is just the right thickness, a red light wave a side wave will bounce off the top and bottom layers in perfect alignment, and the tubers a sign ways will combine to double the amount of red light scene, or they may reflect exactly out of phase and the red light will be eliminated. Because specific colors can be doubled or eliminated depending on the thickness of the film, it changes the color of light and we see colors like colors of the rainbow coming off the film.

On a CD, the surface is mirrored, so the rainbow colors are much more intense. In a c D, the angle that the CD is held at controls the colors you see. The angle, along with the bumps on the c D surface, controls the path difference and therefore the colors you see. Do you have any ideas or suggestions for this podcast? If so, please send me an email at podcast at how stuff works dot com. For more on this and thousands of other topics, go to how

stuff works dot com. Brain Stuff is sponsored by Harry's dot com. Get a great evening experience for a fraction of the price. The quality of the shave is so important that Harry's purchased the factory that makes their blades. Fifteen dollars gets you a set that includes a handle, three blades, and shave cream. Go to Harry's dot com. Use the code brain stuff to save five dollars off your first purchase.

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