THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA 
 
Science 1  
Physics Assignment # 10: 
 
 INTERFERENCE   
 
 22 Mar. 2000 - finish by 29 Mar. 
 
  
Tipler Ch. 33, 
 problems 1, 2, 3, 5, 13, 21, 27 & 35;
  
- 
 
- 1.
- NON-REFLECTIVE FILM COATING:  
A sheet of glass having an index of refraction of 
 1.35 
 is to be coated with a film of material having a refractive index of 
 1.5 
 such that 
bluish-green 
light (wavelength = 
500 
nm) is preferentially transmitted.  
 
- (a)
- What is the minimum thickness of the film 
that will achieve the desired result?  
 
- (b)
- Why are other parts of the visible spectrum not also 
 preferentially transmitted?  
 
- (c)
- Will the transmission of any colors be sharply reduced?  
 
 
  
 
 
- 2.
- 
A pefectly flat piece of glass (
n = 
1.45) is placed over a perfectly flat piece of black plastic (
n = 
1.30) as shown below 
They touch at A.  
Green 
 light of wavelength 
 525 
nm  is incident normally from above.  
 Any light transmitted into the plastic is completely absorbed.  
 The location of the dark fringes in the 
 reflected light is shown in the sketch at lower right.  
   
 
- (a)
- How thick is the space between the glass and the plastic at B? 
- (b)
- Water (n = 1.33) seeps into the region between the glass and plastic.  
 How many dark fringes are seen when all the air has been displaced by water?  
 
 (The straightness and equal spacing of the fringes is an accurate test 
of the flatness of the glass.)
  
 
 
- 3.
- THREE-SLIT INTERFERENCE PATTERN: 
Light of wavelength  600 nm  is incident normally on 
three parallel narrow slits separated by  0.60 mm.  
Sketch the intensity pattern observed on a distant screen 
as a function of angle   for the range of values for the range of values radians. radians.
  
 
 
- 4.
- N-SLIT INTERFERENCE PATTERN:  
The figure below 
shows the intensity pattern produced by light passing through 
 an opaque foil with N narrow slits 
0.3 
mm apart and falling on a screen parallel to the foil 
2.0 
m distant.  
 
- (a)
- What wavelength of light is being used?  
- (b)
- How many slits were there?  
 
 (Neglect the finite widths of the slits; 
 this is an interference problem, 
 not a diffraction problem.)
   
 
 
 
Jess H. Brewer 
2000-03-22