NEAR-FIELD DIFFRACTION BY 2 SLITS IN A BLACK SCREEN

Authors
Citation
Jf. Nye et W. Liang, NEAR-FIELD DIFFRACTION BY 2 SLITS IN A BLACK SCREEN, Proceedings - Royal Society. Mathematical, physical and engineering sciences, 454(1974), 1998, pp. 1635-1658
Citations number
21
Categorie Soggetti
Multidisciplinary Sciences
Journal title
Proceedings - Royal Society. Mathematical, physical and engineering sciences
ISSN journal
13645021 → ACNP
Volume
454
Issue
1974
Year of publication
1998
Pages
1635 - 1658
Database
ISI
SICI code
1364-5021(1998)454:1974<1635:NDB2SI>2.0.ZU;2-M
Abstract
Measurements were made with microwaves of the near-field diffraction p attern formed by two parallel slits in a highly absorbing ('black') sc reen. The first purpose was to examine the validity of superposing the fields of the two separate slits, as would follow from the standard K irchhoff or Rayleigh-Sommerfeld theories. An earlier paper showed that , with a conducting screen, there is a departure from exact superposit ion of 7%, on average, when the polarization is parallel to the slits and 25% when it is perpendicular. The new experiments, which were done at normal incidence with slit widths of 0.5 lambda and separation 1.5 lambda, show that, with a black screen, there is a departure from exa ct superposition of 11% when the polarization is parallel, and 15% whe n it is perpendicular. Each slit generates a field behind the screen, but, unlike the case of the conducting screen, the source of the field cannot be considered to be merely the slit itself; it is as if the wa ve field generated by each of the two slits is affected by whether the other is open or closed. The width of the maximum immediately behind a single slit depends strongly on the polarization, an observation tha t has implications for resolution in, for example, the making of mad;k s using near-field optics. All scalar theories of diffraction by a bla ck screen with translational symmetry imply that the patterns of elect ric field associated with two different polarizations in the incident wave are related: one is the spatial derivative of the other. The fact that this theoretical relation is obeyed by the measurements to a clo se approximation shows that scalar theory is applicable, as an approxi mation, for the imperfect 'black' screen used. The relation would not be obeyed for a conducting screen.