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Gene Fuller wrote:
Cecil Moore wrote: Yes, signals traveling in opposite directions don't interfere. This is a distinction with no technical value. Waves in the same location are subject to the usual rules of linear superposition of the fields. Whether you want to call this "interference" is simply a philosophical choice. Not so. Here's what Eugene Hecht says: "... optical interference corresponds to the interaction of two or more [plane] light waves yielding a resultant irradiance that deviates from the sum of the component irradiances." Superposition can occur with or without interference. If P1 and P2 are the power densities for two plane waves: If Ptot = P1 + P2, there is no interference because the resultant power density does not deviate from the sum of the component power densities. If Ptot P1 + P2, there exists interference because the resultant irradiance does deviate from the sum of the component power densities. There is utterly no scientific distinction that applies to "signals traveling in opposite directions." Interference only occurs when coherent, collinear waves are traveling in the same direction. When they are traveling in opposite directions, standing waves are the result. Let's limit our discussion to plane waves. The mathematical results may look special in the opposite direction case, but the same basic equations apply in all cases. Yes, but boundary conditions apply. The phasors of the plane waves traveling toward each other are rotating in opposite directions so interference is impossible. Here is a slide show about interference which only occurs when the waves are traveling in the same direction. http://astro.gmu.edu/classes/a10594/...8/l08s025.html -- 73, Cecil http://www.w5dxp.com |
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