Cosmic rays are energetic particles originating from space that impinge on Earth's atmosphere. Almost 90% of all the incoming cosmic ray particles are protons, about 9% are helium nuclei (alpha particles) and about 1% are electrons (beta minus particles). The term "ray" is a misnomer, as cosmic particles arrive individually, not in the form of a ray or beam of particles.
Originally posted by: waldocat
I think you mean high frequency radiation, cosmic rays are atomic particles.
If the phase difference were of 180 degrees then you would have destructive interference which means no light.
I suppose you mean the two sources are in phase, in this case you would end with the biggest amplitude possible but you could not change the wave length or frequency unless you change medium.
Originally posted by: Born2bwire
Originally posted by: waldocat
I think you mean high frequency radiation, cosmic rays are atomic particles.
If the phase difference were of 180 degrees then you would have destructive interference which means no light.
I suppose you mean the two sources are in phase, in this case you would end with the biggest amplitude possible but you could not change the wave length or frequency unless you change medium.
In the classical sense though, even changing the medium is generally not going to change the frequency (the exception perhaps is from dispersive mediums, but this has to do with temperal smearing as opposed to shifting of the frequency content). The speed of propagation changes which results in a corresponding change in the wavelength but the frequency stays the same. Quantum mechanically, I an only see a frequency change occuring due to absorption and subsequent stimulated emission. A decrease in frequency will arise if the atom is left in an excited state, and increase if the atom was in an excited state and fell to a lower energy state after emission. Increasing in frequency in this manner is probably not sustainable since you have to inject more energy to bring the atoms in the medium back up to an excited state.
Originally posted by: waldocat
To do what? Increase your initial frequency by interfering two coherent (but out of phase) waves ? You would not be able to that.
Originally posted by: Onceler
your right 180 is cancelling,I meant to say 90 degrees out of sync you can do it with RF
forget about cosmic rays,is it possible to do this with light?
Originally posted by: Onceler
you can do it with RF if you feed it to a transistor it amplifies them as if they were one wave
Originally posted by: Onceler
you can do it with RF if you feed it to a transistor it amplifies them as if they were one wave