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Isomorphism
between
Trains of Laser Pulses
and
Arrays of Laser Illuminated Slits
To: Fellow Fourier Transform Afficionados,
At our last Laser Lunch we were trying to establish the isomorphism
between
- a sequence of identically structured pulses in time with its
concomitant Fourier spectrum and
- a multi-slit radiation source with its concomitant far field
interference-diffraction pattern (amplitude, NOT intensity),
which by the Fraunhofer-Kirchhof theorem is simply the
Fourier amplitude of the source amplitude.
Contrary to my initial claim, the validity of this isomorphism holds
always if the multi-slit screen in (2.) gets illuminated by plane wave
fronts which strike all the slits at once. In other words, the laser
in back of the multislit screen is always directed perpendicularly to
that screen.
In order to take advantage of the isomorphism I propose that we smoke
out the interference-diffraction pattern for a number of differently
structured slit sources corresponding to different experiments.
- I.
- Unstructured slits
- a)
- A single unstructured slit of width L (on page 18-10 of
the hand written handout, or of width
on page 18-5
of the same handout)
- b)
- Two unstructured slits whose separation s is large
compared to the slit width
:
.
- c)
unstructured slits, equally spaced, whose nearest
neighbor separation s is large compared to the slit width
:
.
Question: Is the diffference between the
diffraction amplitude patterns (Fourier amplitudes) for
and
important?
- II.
- Identically structured slits, each one containing a periodic
transmission grating having
maxima so that
- a)
- A single such structured slit.
- b)
- Two such structured slits whose separation s is large
compared to the slit width
:
and
is any integer.
- c)
such structured slits, equally spaced, whose
nearest separation is large compared to the slit width
:
,
.
I believe that it is safe to say that, once we understand the Young's
multi-slit interference-diffraction pattern, we understand the Fourier
transform of the corresponding train of laser pulses in the time
domain.
Sincerely,
Ulrich Gerlach
P.S. The nature of the isomrphism between a train of laser pulses
and a Young's multi-slit interference of diffraction patterns is
is highlighted in parts 1 and 4 of the hand written handout, copies
of which I will leave in SM 0064.
The theoretical principle underlying "sinc"-shaped pulses (a.k.a. wave packets)
is found in another handout, which is a continuation of the handout from
3 or 4 weeks ago.
P.P.S. We still must come back to Richard Hamming's "You and Your
Research," and report on which of his idea(s) is most appealing to
you.
P.P.P.S. We must think about how to measure the phase of the optical
carrier of a train of laser pulses.
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Ulrich Gerlach
2003-10-22