Abstract
A LIGHT wave, when reflected1 at the surface of separation of two media, may be altered in amplitude, or wavelength, or phase. Whilst, however, a change of amplitude or wave-length produces an obvious difference between the incident and reflected light, the existence and nature of a change of phase can only in general be inferred from the result of some kind of interference experiment. Thus the fact that a very thin transparent film is black when viewed by reflected light leads to the conclusion that a light wave is altered in phase by half a wave-length on reflection, either at a denser or at a rarer medium. Mechanical analogies suggest that the change probably takes place at the denser medium; and an experiment of Lloyd's, in which coloured fringes with a black centre were obtained by the interference of two beams of light, one directly transmitted, and the other reflected from a glass mirror, led to the same conclusion.
Article PDF
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
EDSER, E., STANSFIELD, H. Phase-Change of light on Reflection at a Silver Surface. Nature 56, 504–506 (1897). https://doi.org/10.1038/056504b0
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/056504b0