Sodium Fringes
Part 2 of the Michelson lab, where we examine interference fringes from a sodium lamp. Sodium has two bright, closely spaced emission lines in the yellow part of the spectrum, near 589 nm. Because there are two wavelengths present, there are also two interference patterns, right on top of each other. But depending on the relative lengths of the interferometer arms, sometimes the bright parts of one pattern fall on the bright parts of the other, and sometimes they fall on the dark parts of the other. This causes the contrast of the combined interference pattern to change from a maximum to near invisibility in a periodic fashion as the length of one of the interferometer arms is continuously changed.

▶︎
White Light Fringes

▶︎
Laser Interference Fringes

▶︎
Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) Principle Demonstrated

▶︎
Watch Ukrainian Drones OBLITERATE a Russian Jet

▶︎
NERVOUS 12-Year-Old Who Can Sing Without Opening Her Mouth Earns Mel B's GOLDEN BUZZER!

▶︎
Why Put A Capacitor Across The Diode? Here's Why!

▶︎
ASMR Mysterious Growth ❓ CLOSE Medical Exam 👩⚕️Professional Doctor Facial Examination

▶︎
ASMR o melhor corte de cabelo pra dormir 🌙 roleplay br voz suave

▶︎
Light sucking flames look like magic

▶︎
The biggest lie about the double slit experiment

▶︎
The Strange Physics Behind the Oberth Effect

▶︎
Why Returning From Mars Is Impossible: Feynman's Warning

▶︎
Exploring White Light Interferometry! (WLI / CSI)

▶︎
Crystals and Science; energies, frequencies and vibration

▶︎
Faraday's last experiment

▶︎
What's NEW at✨SAM'S CLUB✨ + June 2026 INSTANT SAVING!!

▶︎
We finally understood orbital shapes intuitively! (My mind is blown)

▶︎
Michelson Interferometer

▶︎
How Light Travels Without Moving? Reality Check | Prof. Lene Hau | Harvard Physics

▶︎
