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Cecil Moore wrote:
To Jim, and anyone else who wants to discuss it. I've created a graphic illustrating reflections from a thin-film when the incident laser beam is at an angle to the thin-film surface. http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp/weblaser.GIF Question for Jim: I can see Reflection A and Reflection B. I can measure the irradiance of Reflection A and Reflection B. Are the two reflections really there or not? If they are there, do they possess energy and momentum? That will get us started. It doesn't show up on my web browser. Do you have the URL right? If you have a photon zinging through space it posseses both energy and momentum, and they are each an easy function of the wavelength. To pick nits, if you have a _stream_ of photons zinging by it will posess, on average, power and thrust (or whatever the time-derivative of momentum is called). If reflections A and B are both there they will each carry a certain amount of power and exert a certain thrust somewhere. If you have actually set up this thin film experiment and measured two seperate reflections then they are indeed there. You can debate whether the reflections are truely reflective of the theory that you're trying to demonstrate or if they reflect (or perhaps reflect off of?) imperfections in your experimental setup. -- ------------------------------------------- Tim Wescott Wescott Design Services http://www.wescottdesign.com |
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