Phenomena of interference and Young’s double slit experiment : A Review
Keywords:
Double-slit experiment, Quantum MechanicsAbstract
The double-slit experiment in quantum mechanics is an experiment devised by physicist Thomas Young. It shows that light has both a wave nature or characteristic and a particle nature or characteristic, and that these natures are inseparable. So light is said to have wave–particle duality rather than be only a wave or only a particle. The same is true of electrons and other quantum particles. Although Christiaan Huygens thought that light was a wave, Isaac Newton did not. Newton felt that there were other explanations for color, and for the interference and diffraction effects that were observable at the time. Owing to Newton’s tremendous stature, his view generally prevailed. The fact that Huygens’s principle worked was not considered evidence that was direct enough to prove that light is a wave. The acceptance of the wave character of light came many years later when, in 1801, the English physicist and physician Thomas Young (1773–1829) did his now-classic double slit experiment
References
Quantum Mechanics (3rd edition) by L. I. Schiff
Quantum Mechanics (2nd edition) by B. H. Bransden and Joachain
Quantum Mechanics (3rd edition) by S. Gasiorowicz
Quantum Mechanics (3rd edition) by E. Merzbacher
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