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Cecil Moore wrote:
Gene Fuller wrote: It is easy to give examples where the waves survive the superposition, because they always do. It is rather strange that you are making this argument after all the back and forth about traveling waves and standing waves. Do we now have multiple flavors of EM waves? Some that obey superposition and some that don't? They all obey superposition which can occur with or without interference. And you are wrong about all waves surviving superposition. Canceled waves do not survive wave cancellation in the direction that they are traveling. Access this web page and set the two waves to equal frequencies, equal magnitudes, and opposite phases, i.e. 0 and 180 degrees. http://micro.magnet.fsu.edu/primer/j...ons/index.html When you do that, the waves are canceled in their original direction of travel. The energy in those canceled waves certainly survives, but those two original waves cease to exist never to be seen again. I must have missed class the day they went over the theory of "cancellation". You must have. Please run the above java application and alleviate your ignorance about what you missed. Why do the waves disappear when they are of equal magnitude and opposite phase? [snip] Cecil, That's really funny. A grad student and a programmer put together a simply java applet to try to illustrate the concept of interference, and you treat it as a new bible. I bet the authors would be appalled by your interpretation. By the way, did you look beyond the pretty pictures and read the section where the authors said, "All of the wave examples presented in Figure 1 portray waves propagating in the same direction, but in many cases, light waves traveling in different directions can briefly meet and undergo interference. After the waves have passed each other, however, they will resume their original course, having the same amplitude, wavelength, and phase that they had before meeting." Hmmm, I think that is exactly what I said in this thread on RRAA. 73, Gene W4SZ |
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