constructive interference

physics

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electromagnetic radiation

  • Photosynthesis
    In electromagnetic radiation: Superposition and interference

    …intensity, constitutes what is called constructive interference. The second example, that of out-of-phase superposition yielding zero intensity, is destructive interference. Since the resultant field at any point and time is the sum of all individual fields at that point and time, these arguments are easily extended to any number of…

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interference fringe

  • Interference fringe
    In interference fringe

    …phase; these phenomena are called constructive and destructive interference, respectively. If a beam of monochromatic light (all waves having the same wavelength) is passed through two narrow slits (an experiment first performed in 1801 by Thomas Young, an English scientist, who inferred from the phenomenon the wavelike nature of light),…

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radio telescopes

  • Lovell Telescope
    In radio telescope: Radio interferometry and aperture synthesis

    …alternately arrive in phase (constructive interference) and out of phase (destructive interference) as Earth rotates and causes a change in the difference in path from the radio source to the two elements of the interferometer. This produces interference fringes in a manner similar to that in an optical interferometer.…

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sound waves

spectral diffraction

X rays