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measure total distance over long time, with speed possibly varying a lot in between |
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Speed right now (speedometer) |
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Term
Vectors
Adding a Vector
Subtracting a Vector
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Definition
A physical quantity having some magnitude in a given direction: Velocity, Acceleration, Force
Adding a Vector- In same direction ADD
e.i.- walk 1 m/s down a down escalator going 1 m/s. Your total speed is 1+1=2 m/s relative to fixed ground
Subtracting a Vector- In opposite direction SUBTRACT
e.i.- 100 N force to the right and 50 to the left= 100-50 to the right |
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Definition
Speed in direction of travel
Speed or direction
Changes a constant (only constant w/ acceleration) amount per unit time
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change in velocity/ change in time
Constant but 0 with velocity
e.i.
- forward -- speeding up
- backwards -- slowing down
- @ right angles to the motion-- change in direction or turning
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Definition
A push or pull in a given direction
Vector- the strength of a push or pull in a given direction.
NET FORCE- every force acting on an object
Unit-- Newton |
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Definition
Changes at an increasing rate each second (acceleration)
Changes equal amounts in equal times (velocity) |
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Definition
Any object falls to earth with same acceleration
g=10 m/s^2,
in absence of air resistance
e.i.
- constant downward acceleration g= 10 m/s^2
- upward velocity slows down
- downward velocity increases with time.
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Term
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Definition
an object at rest or with constant velocity, fixed speed is
in a straight line (inertial motion)
any object undergoes inertial motion unless acted upon
by a net outside force |
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Definition
when object has no net outside force |
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Definition
object at rest remains at rest. |
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Definition
object in motion goes at constant velocity |
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Definition
Net force on an object causes the acceleration of that
object proportional to net force, inversely proportional to
mass (m)
a= F_net/m |
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Term
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Definition
tendency of object to stay at constant velocity
resistance to change in motion is proportional to mass |
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Term
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Definition
amount of material an object contains (stuff) Units= Kg |
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Definition
Force of gravity pulling object to earth i s proportional to
its mass. BUT NOT the same as mass! |
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Definition
Force acting on object by another always comes with an
equal and opposite reaction by the first on the other.
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Definition
two objects touching each other
e.i.- walking or driving a car: you push back against ground, it pushes you forward
e.i- Rocket: hot gas is pushed out of the rocket. rocket propelled forward by push back of gas |
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Definition
force of gravity
magnitude mg, pointing down
W= m g
m= object mass
g= 10 m/s^2 on surface of earth.
g on moon much smaller. Things weigh 1/6 as much as on earth
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Definition
force between two rigid objects at their surfaces
preventing their motion through each other.
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Definition
rubbing force between two surfaces
e.i: to be at rest, the net force on it has to be zero
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Definition
mass x velocity
p=mv
measures how hard it is to stop an object
cannot change unless object acted upon by outside force
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Definition
p = Force applied times time it's applied
The same can be either large force over short
time (hard collision) or small force over large time
(gentle collision)
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Term
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Definition
Elastic-- bounce--momentum is conserved and KE
Inelastic--stick--momentum is conserved but NOT KE |
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Definition
Force applied x distance object is moved
Units of work/energy: 1 Joule = 1 Newton x 1 meter
W= (mg) h or weight x height lifted |
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Definition
energy stored in position (with respect to a force) require
WORK against a force to gain potential ENERGY
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Definition
1/2 mass x speed squared:
W= 1/2 mv^2
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Definition
energy stored in a moving object
KE=1/2 mv^2
= total amount of work put into accelerating it
= total amount of work it can do coming to a stop |
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Definition
KE is amount of "damage" an object can do
Momentum is how hard it is to stop
bullet of 1kg going at 100m/s
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Term
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Definition
energy cannot be created nor destroyed or lost
if an object is doing no work, and nothing is doing work
on it
its total energy, KE+PE, does not change
PE lost (as you lose height) = KE gained (as you gain
speed) |
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Definition
to friction is not gained as PE! it goes into heat or
thermal energy
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Term
Vibrations (or oscillations) |
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Definition
Motion of object goes in repeated cycles
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Definition
time to go one complete cycle |
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number of cycles completed per unit time
1 Hertz (Hz)= 1 cycle/ second
Frequency is 1/ Period
f= 1/ T
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Definition
driving frequency equals Natural Frequency--frequency at
which an object will
oscillate IF LEFT TO ITSELF
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Term
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Definition
oscillatory disturbances that travel in some medium,
through space.
sound wave--travels through air |
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Definition
distance from crest to crest or trough to trough |
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Definition
time for successive crests to pass by any given point |
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depends only on the medium the wave is travelling in |
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Definition
size of displacement caused by wave |
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Definition
air molecules displaced back and forth |
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Definition
displacement of medium is perpendicular to direction of
travel of wave |
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Definition
displacement of medium is along the direction of travel of
the wave |
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Definition
constructive interference |
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frequency as interpreted by ear
double frequency-- raise pitch by--octave |
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Definition
amplitude squared of displacement of sound wave
change in air pressure detected by ear |
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Definition
how many overtones sound when a musical note is played
IE how many different frequencies combine to make the
note |
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Definition
Two types--- + and -
Likes repel, opposites attract
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Term
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Definition
1 Coulomb (standard metric unit of charge) = charge of
6.25 x 10^18 electrons
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Definition
negative charge, magnitude e |
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Definition
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Charge is not created nor destroyed, but transferred by
transmitting electrons from one object to another
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Definition
# electrons roughly equals # protons |
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Definition
electrons move freely inside
transfer electrons by contact with conductor
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Definition
all electrons bound to atoms
transfer electrons by vigorous rubbing |
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Definition
transfers charge between insulators
one becomes positively charged
the other negatively charged
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Term
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Definition
presence of charge near a conductor "induces" charges
inside conductor to travel
opposite charges nearer to outside charge like charges
farther from it. |
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Definition
contact with large conductor can remove excess charge
from object.
Earth (if wet) is an excellent ground |
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Definition
force between two charges q1, q2
depends on each charge
inversely proportional to distance squared between them
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Definition
"aura" around any charge, its ability to exert force
measures their ability to exert force on other charges |
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Definition
Force on test charge in field/ charge of test charge
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Term
Field lines/ lines of force |
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Definition
show direction of E field at any point
spacing gives sense of its strength
point--away from--positive charge
point--towards--negative charge |
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Term
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Definition
work done to move test charge to a position / its charge
V= PE/q
V measured in Volts (Joules per Coulomb) |
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Definition
maintains a constant potential across its leads
High potential positively charged, low potential,
negatively charged
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Definition
resists flow of current across it |
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Definition
like a resistor, buts emits light |
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Definition
change in electric potential across a circuit element
1 Volt= 1 Joule / Coulomb
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Term
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Definition
flow of charge past a given point-- charge flow per unit
time
1 Ampere= 1 Coulomb / second |
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Definition
resistance to current flow thru a resistor measured in
Ohms
bulb filament= high resistor
wire= low resistance
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Definition
Voltage / Resistance (I= V/ R) |
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Definition
Current= Same
Voltage= different |
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Definition
Voltage= Same
Current= different |
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P= Voltage x Current ( P=VI) (Watts= Volts x Amps)
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Definition
Presence of magnetic field turns iron objects into magnets
themselves |
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Definition
a straight wire has a magnetic field that circles it in loops
field proportional to current |
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Term
Magnetic field of wire loop (or coil of loops) |
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Definition
Field passes through loop and acts like a bar magnet
North pole= field line leave loop
South pole= where field line enter loop
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Term
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Definition
many wire loops around unmagnetized iron/steel rod.
Current magnetizes iron
Result is much stronger magnet than that current alone |
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Term
Force on a wire int he presence of a magnetic field |
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Definition
an electric current running perpendicular (or partly perpendicular) to magnetic field to feels a force
perpendicular to field and current
magnetic field DOES NOT WORK |
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Term
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Definition
Converts Electric energy--- mechanical energy |
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Term
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Definition
a change i the magnetic field passing through a wire loop
or coil induces current in the loop
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Term
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Definition
uses magnetic induction to convert
Mechanical energy--Electric energy |
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Term
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Definition
an eletromagnetic whose magnetic field changes creates
AN INDUCED ELECTRIC FIELD in its vicinity
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Term
Speed of electromagnetic wave IN VACCUUM |
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Definition
c= 300,000,000 meters/second= 3x 10 ^ 8 meters/second
30 cm every 1 billionth second |
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Definition
wavelength x frequency= >c
Instantaneous ? of light is always c |
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Term
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Definition
ROY G. BIV
blue has shorter wavelength than red |
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Definition
longer wavelength than red; "heat" from the sun |
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Definition
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Definition
very long wavelengths, up to kilometers |
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Definition
wavelength comparable to atom diameter |
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Definition
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Term
Light is a Particle or Wave |
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Definition
Both
Particle like and Wave-liker properties |
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Definition
quantum of light
light "particle"
short burst of light energy |
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Definition
h x frequency
h--planks constant
blue? more energy than red: X-ray, Gamma-rays very high
energy |
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Term
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Definition
high energy UV photons kick out electrons from metal.
Lower energy light photons can't
proof of particle nature of light
(energy comes in small bundle rather than spread out everywhere like a wave) |
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Intensity/Brightness of light |
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Definition
number photons/ unit time |
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Definition
analysis of intensity of light of different frequencies |
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Term
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Definition
light of one specific frequency seen in emission spectra of
an atom |
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Definition
electron emits light, and decays from high energy orbit to low
change in electron energy=hf=photon energy |
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Definition
glow of some minerals in UV light
electron excited by UV light decays back to low energy in smaller energy steps
resulting photons are visible light |
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Definition
glow of black body (eg coals, sun, stove burner)
with temperature
average frequency= temperature of body |
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Definition
slows down in a dense medium; v=c/n; n--index of refraction,=1.5 for glass |
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Definition
light takes shortest time path going from one point to another |
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Definition
ray of light reflected leaves at same angle as it came in: angle in= angle out |
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Definition
when entering a slower medium, light bends "in"
when entering fast medium, light bends "out" |
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Definition
100% reflection when rays strike object at glancing angle |
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Definition
refraction of light as goes from lighter air to denser.
See sun horizon when it has already passed below |
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Definition
a point where light from an object is made converge to or diverge from, by using laws of reflection or refraction
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Definition
bends light in same direction at each surface |
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Definition
blue light is slower than red
it is bent more by refraction |
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Term
Total internal reflection |
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Definition
when light hits a surface from inside a dense medium (e.i. from inside water, trying to got to air) an angle > 45 degrees
100% of light is reflected, 9% is transmitted (passes thru) fiber optics
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Term
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Definition
used to focus light
focal length of lens
image from distant object is inverted (upside down)
image is real
energy of light is focused at focal point
only part of lens is needed to capture whole image |
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Definition
all wave properties can be constructed by looking at light as coming from lots of point sources |
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Definition
light bending around obstacles due to interferences of light in/around the obstacle |
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Large wavelengths bend more than small while ? bend the most |
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Definition
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Greater bending occurs from small diameter objects than ? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
combination of displacements of two or more waves when colliding
occurs form any type of wave |
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Term
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Definition
bright spots occur when constructive interference between light of two slits occurs
Spacing of peaks depends on wavelength
Red peaks displaced more than blue
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Term
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Definition
interference from many slits
used as prism. to spread out light of different frequencies
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Definition
example of thin film interferences
interferences of reflected light from front surfaces and back
color depends on which wavelength constructively interferes
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Term
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Definition
direction in which wave is displaced as travels through medium
absorbs light, lets other through
converts unpolarized light into ?
crossed -- 100% light absorbed
reflected glare naturally ? |
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Definition
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