Abstract

The basic premise of this work was to create a simple experimental setup for the demonstration of Fresnel–Arago laws and the realization of an experimental exercise. An Iceland calcite is used as a beam splitter, and by adding a diverging lens (commonly used to magnify the image), a large image of overlapping spots is obtained at a short distance, visible to a wide audience. Additionally, by placing a diverging lens at different distances from the calcite, the level of the spots overlapping can be changed. The interference image is photographed by a smartphone and processed by one of the available applications for quantitative image processing. The experiment was carried out using red and green laser light. The same setup, with a diverging lens, also allows the reconstruction of the original Fresnel and Arago experiment with a thin metal cylinder. Quick and easy construction, relatively simple processing of the interference image, without the use of expensive devices (CCD camera, beam splitter, beam expander), and the good agreement between the nominal and measured laser light wavelengths, make this setup very suitable for realization as a student exercise for undergraduate and master’s students.

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