Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2010
When light is incident on a small aperture in a screen, the illumination at any point in front of the screen is determined, on the undulatory theory, in the following manner. The incident waves are conceived to be broken up on arriving at the aperture; each element of the aperture is considered as the centre of an elementary disturbance, which diverges spherically in all directions, with an intensity which does not vary rapidly from one direction to another in the neighbourhood of the normal to the primary wave; and the disturbance at any point is found by taking the aggregate of the disturbances due to all the secondary waves, the phase of vibration of each being retarded by a quantity corresponding to the distance from its centre to the point where the disturbance is sought. The square of the coefficient of vibration is then taken as a measure of the intensity of illumination. Let us consider for a moment the hypotheses on which this process rests. In the first place, it is no hypothesis that we may conceive the waves broken up on arriving at the aperture: it is a necessary consequence of the dynamical principle of the superposition of small motions; and if this principle be inapplicable to light, the undulatory theory is upset from its very foundations.
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