[Physics] Young’s Double Slit Experiment : What would happen if the “first slit” was too wide

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A picture showing Young's Double Slit experiment

I was wondering what would happen to the fringe pattern displayed on the screen if the first slit (as shown in the picture), which is also known as "single slit", was made a bit wider. I read it in my book. I don't understand it. Anyway, it quotes

If the single slit is too wide, each part of it produces a fringe pattern which is displaced slightly from the pattern due to adjacent parts of the single slit. As a result, the dark fringes of double slit pattern become narrower than the bright fringes, and contrast is lost between the dark and the bright fringes.

Please answer the question in your own words and try to explain to me what the quote is trying to say. Also, when it says "parts", what does it mean?

Best Answer

I hope the following diagram is a "picture worth more than a thousand words":

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As you can see, a "narrow" first slit gives all the light incident on the pair of slits a very definite direction - and therefore a very definite location of the fringe pattern.

When the first slit is wider, the light could be hitting the double slits in multiple different directions. Each direction gives rise to its own fringe pattern; the sum of these patterns is a pattern with reduced contrast.