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Diffraction
Anna Kowalski
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calendar_month2025-11-07

Diffraction: When Waves Bend

Exploring how waves spread out as they pass through a gap or around an obstacle.
Summary: Diffraction is a fundamental wave behavior where waves, such as water waves, sound waves, and light waves, spread out and bend when they encounter an obstacle or pass through an aperture[1]. This phenomenon is crucial for understanding how we hear around corners, why shadows are not perfectly sharp, and the resolving power of optical instruments like telescopes and microscopes. The extent of diffraction depends on the relationship between the wavelength[2] of the wave and the size of the obstacle or opening.

The Core Principles of Wave Bending

At its heart, diffraction is all about waves not traveling in perfectly straight lines. Imagine a group of marching soldiers who encounter a large tree. They would easily march around it in an organized way, reforming their lines on the other side. This is similar to how waves behave. When a wave meets a barrier, the parts of the wave that are not blocked become new sources of wavelets that spread out from that point. This idea is formalized in a concept called Huygens' Principle.

Huygens' Principle: Every point on a wavefront[3] is a source of secondary spherical wavelets that spread out at the same speed as the original wave. The new wavefront is the surface that is tangent to all these wavelets.

The most important factor that determines how much a wave diffracts is the size of the obstacle or gap compared to the wave's wavelength. The wavelength ($\lambda$) is the distance between two successive crests (or troughs) of a wave.

ScenarioAmount of DiffractionReal-World Example
Gap size is much larger than wavelength ($\lambda \ll$ gap)Little to no spreading. The wave goes mostly straight through.Light from a doorway creates a sharp shadow on the floor.
Gap size is similar to wavelength ($\lambda \approx$ gap)Significant spreading. The wave bends strongly around the edges.Water waves spreading out after passing through a harbor entrance.
Gap size is smaller than wavelength ($\lambda >$ gap)Very strong spreading. The gap acts like a new point source.Hearing low-pitched sounds (bass) from another room around a door.

Diffraction in Different Types of Waves

Diffraction is a universal property of waves. It doesn't matter what kind of wave it is; if it's a wave, it will diffract. However, because different waves have vastly different wavelengths, we observe diffraction in different ways.

Sound Waves: Sound waves have wavelengths ranging from about 17 meters (for a 20 Hz bass note) to about 1.7 centimeters (for a 20,000 Hz treble note). A typical doorway is about 0.8 meters wide. For low-frequency (bass) sounds, the wavelength is larger than the door opening ($\lambda >$ gap), so they diffract much more easily. This is why you can hear the bass from your neighbor's party even when their door is closed, but the higher-pitched voices and melodies are muffled.

Water Waves: These are one of the easiest waves to observe diffracting. The wavelength of water ripples can be just a few centimeters. If you create water waves in a ripple tank and send them towards a barrier with a small gap, you will see the waves curve and spread out into the region behind the barrier. The smaller the gap, the more circular the waves become on the other side.

Light Waves: Light has extremely short wavelengths, from about 400 to 700 nanometers (billionths of a meter). Because these wavelengths are so much smaller than everyday objects like doors and windows, we don't usually see light bending around corners. However, if you look very closely at the edge of a shadow, you might notice it's slightly fuzzy and not razor-sharp. This fuzziness is due to diffraction. To see dramatic light diffraction, we need openings that are as small as light's wavelength, like the grooves on a CD or a finely scratched surface.

Seeing Diffraction in Action: A CD and a Laser Pointer

One of the most beautiful demonstrations of diffraction involves a simple CD or DVD and a laser pointer. The surface of a CD has a spiral track of tiny pits that are very close together, acting as a series of equally spaced gaps (a diffraction grating).

What to do: In a dimly lit room, shine a laser pointer at the surface of a CD (the shiny side, not the label side). Tilt the CD until you see a reflection of the laser dot. But look more carefully, and you will also see several other bright spots of light projected on the wall, often in different colors if you use a white light source instead of a laser.

What's happening: The closely spaced grooves on the CD are acting as multiple slits for the light to diffract through. Each groove diffracts the light, and these diffracted waves interfere with each other—they combine to create a pattern of bright and dark spots. This phenomenon is called diffraction grating interference. The different colors appear because white light is a mixture of all colors (wavelengths), and each wavelength is diffracted by a slightly different amount, spreading the light into a rainbow spectrum.

Common Mistakes and Important Questions

Q: Is diffraction the same as refraction?

No, these are two different phenomena. Diffraction is the bending of waves around obstacles or through openings. Refraction is the bending of waves when they pass from one medium into another (e.g., from air into water) due to a change in their speed. A straw looking bent in a glass of water is refraction. Hearing sound from around a corner is diffraction.

Q: Why can't I see light bending around a building like sound does?

This goes back to the relationship between wavelength and obstacle size. The wavelength of visible light is incredibly small (less than a millionth of a meter), while a building is enormous. For significant diffraction to occur, the size of the obstacle must be comparable to the wavelength. Since a building is billions of times larger than a light wave, the diffraction is negligible and impossible to see with the naked eye. Sound waves, with their much longer wavelengths, easily meet this condition for common obstacles.

Q: Does diffraction only happen with a single slit or gap?

No, diffraction occurs with any obstacle or opening. With a single slit, you get a broad, spread-out pattern. With two slits close together (the famous Double-Slit Experiment), the light diffracting from each slit interferes with the other, creating a pattern of alternating bright and dark bands called an interference pattern. This is a classic demonstration that light exhibits wave-like properties.
Conclusion: Diffraction is the subtle but powerful phenomenon that reveals the true wave nature of light, sound, and water. It explains why we can hear around corners, why shadows are not perfectly defined, and how scientists can study the structure of tiny objects. By understanding the simple rule—that waves spread out most when they encounter an obstacle or gap similar in size to their wavelength—we can unravel a wide range of experiences in our daily lives and in advanced technology. From the design of speakers to the limits of powerful microscopes, the principles of diffraction are always at play, bending waves into the spaces we expect them not to go.

Footnote

[1] Aperture: An opening, hole, or gap. In the context of diffraction, it is the opening through which a wave passes.

[2] Wavelength ($\lambda$): The distance between two successive identical points on a wave, such as from crest to crest or trough to trough. It is usually measured in meters (m).

[3] Wavefront: An imaginary surface that connects all points of a wave that are in the same phase of vibration (e.g., all the crests). For a ripple from a single stone, the wavefront is a circle.

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