A bit of a physics question here. In several threads dealing with bass systems, especially open baffle bass drivers and also front/rear combination subwoofers, people talk about the beneficial effects of front/back waves meeting and cancelling. I guess I'm confused. I know what deconstructive interference in waves is, and that when out of phase waves meet they deconstructively interfere (cancel). But I thought the waves still continued on their original paths. That is, the cancel at that one spot where they meet, but they continue on and exist beyond that point. The waves don't cancel and then cease to exist. Am I missing something? I guess I don't understand the advantage of an open baffle bass system. Just because the front and back waves cancel at 90 degrees (the plane of the speaker), it doesn't mean they cancel elsewhere, right?
Can anyone point me to some resources describing the acoustical physics here? I took engineering physics in college and did really well in it, but that was over a decade ago and I'm not in that kind of technical profession to keep up the knowledge.