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Diffraction grating

In optics, a diffraction grating is an optical component with a periodic structure that diffracts light into several beams travelling in different directions (i.e., different diffraction angles). The emerging coloration is a form of structural coloration.[1][2] The directions or diffraction angles of these beams depend on the wave (light) incident angle to the diffraction grating, the spacing or distance between adjacent diffracting elements (e.g., parallel slits for a transmission grating) on the grating, and the wavelength of the incident light. The grating acts as a dispersive element. Because of this, diffraction gratings are commonly used in monochromators and spectrometers, but other applications are also possible such as optical encoders for high precision motion control[3] and wavefront measurement.[4][5]

A very large reflecting diffraction grating
An incandescent light bulb viewed through a diffractive effects filter.

For typical applications, a reflective grating has ridges or rulings on its surface while a transmissive grating has transmissive or hollow slits on its surface.[6] Such a grating modulates the amplitude of an incident wave on it to create a diffraction pattern. There are also gratings that modulate the phases of incident waves rather than the amplitude, and these type of gratings can be produced frequently by using holography.[7]

James Gregory (1638–1675) observed the diffraction patterns caused by a bird feather, which was effectively the first diffraction grating (in a natural form) to be discovered, about a year after Isaac Newton's prism experiments.[8] The first man-made diffraction grating was made around 1785 by Philadelphia inventor David Rittenhouse, who strung hairs between two finely threaded screws.[9][10] This was similar to notable German physicist Joseph von Fraunhofer's wire diffraction grating in 1821.[11][12] The principles of diffraction were discovered by Thomas Young[13] and Augustin-Jean Fresnel.[14][15] Using these principles, Fraunhofer was the first who used a diffraction grating to obtain line spectra and the first who measured the wavelengths of spectral lines with a diffraction grating.

Gratings with the lowest line-distance (d) were created, in the 1860s, by Friedrich Adolph Nobert (1806–1881) in Greifswald;[16] then the two Americans Lewis Morris Rutherfurd (1816–1892) and William B. Rogers (1804–1882) took over the lead;[17][18] and, by the end of the 19th century, the concave gratings of Henry Augustus Rowland (1848–1901) were the best available.[19][20]

A diffraction grating can create "rainbow" colors when it is illuminated by a wide-spectrum (e.g., continuous) light source. Rainbow-like colors from closely spaced narrow tracks on optical data storage disks such as CDs or DVDs are an example of light diffraction caused by diffraction gratings. A usual diffraction grating has parallel lines (It is true for 1-dimensional gratings, but 2 or 3-dimensional gratings are also possible and they have their own applications such as wavefront measurement), while a CD has a spiral of finely spaced data tracks. Diffraction colors also appear when one looks at a bright point source through a translucent fine-pitch umbrella-fabric covering. Decorative patterned plastic films based on reflective grating patches are inexpensive and commonplace. A similar color separation seen from thin layers of oil (or gasoline, etc.) on water, known as iridescence, are not caused by diffraction from a grating but rather by thin film interference from the closely stacked transmissive layers.

Theory of operation

 
A diffraction grating reflecting only the green portion of the spectrum from a room's fluorescent lighting

For a diffraction grating, the relationship between the grating spacing (i.e., the distance between adjacent grating grooves or slits), the angle of the wave (light) incidence to the grating, and the diffracted wave from the grating, is known as the grating equation. Like many other optical formulas, the grating equation can be derived by using the Huygens–Fresnel principle, stating that each point on a wavefront of a propagating wave can be considered to act as a point wave source, and a wavefront at any subsequent point can be found by adding together the contributions from each of these individual point wave sources on the previous wavefront.

Gratings may be of the 'reflective' or 'transmissive' type, analogous to a mirror or lens, respectively. A grating has a 'zero-order mode' (where the integer order of diffraction m is set to zero), in which a ray of light behaves according to the laws of reflection (like a mirror) and refraction (like a lens), respectively.

 
A diagram showing the path difference between rays of light scattered from adjacent rulings at the same local position on each ruling of a reflective diffraction grating (actually a blazed grating). The choice of + or - in the path difference formula depends on which ray path is the reference from which the difference is calculated. Note that the pair of the black ray path parts and the pair of the light green ray path parts have no path difference in each pair, while there is a path difference in the red ray path part pair that matters in the diffraction grating equation derivation.

An idealized diffraction grating is made up of a set of slits of spacing  , that must be wider than the wavelength of interest to cause diffraction. Assuming a plane wave of monochromatic light of wavelength   at normal incidence on a grating (I.e., wavefronts of the incident wave are parallel to the grating main plane), each slit in the grating acts as a quasi point wave source from which light propagates in all directions (although this is typically limited to the forward hemisphere from the point source). Of course, every point on every slit to which the incident wave reaches plays as a point wave source for the diffraction wave and all these contributions to the diffraction wave determine the detailed diffraction wave light property distribution, but diffraction angles (at the grating) at which the diffraction wave intensity is highest are determined only by these quasi point sources corresponding the slits in the grating. After the incident light (wave) interacts with the grating, the resulting diffracted light from the grating is composed of the sum of interfering wave components emanating from each slit in the grating; At any given point in space through which the diffracted light may pass, typically called observation point, the path length from each slit in the grating to the given point varies, so the phase of the wave emanating from each of the slits at that point also varies. As a result, the sum of the diffracted waves from the grating slits at the given observation point creates a peak, valley, or some degree between them in light intensity through additive and destructive interference. When the difference between the light paths from adjacent slits to the observation point is equal to an odd integer-multiple of the half of the wavelength, l  with an odd integer  , the waves are out of phase at that point, and thus cancel each other to create the (locally) minimum light intensity. Similarly, when the path difference is a multiple of  , the waves are in phase and the (locally) maximum intensity occurs. For light at the normal incidence to the grating, the intensity maxima occur at diffraction angles  , which satisfy the relationship  , where   is the angle between the diffracted ray and the grating's normal vector,   is the distance from the center of one slit to the center of the adjacent slit, and   is an integer representing the propagation-mode of interest called the diffraction order.

 
Comparison of the spectra obtained from a diffraction grating by diffraction (1), and a prism by refraction (2). Longer wavelengths (red) are diffracted more, but refracted less than shorter wavelengths (violet).
 
Intensity as heatmap for monochromatic light behind a grating

When a plane light wave is normally incident on the grating, the diffracted light has maxima at diffraction angles   given by the diffraction equation as

 

It can be shown that if the plane wave is incident at any arbitrary angle   to the grating normal, the grating equation becomes

 
or   Either choice is fine as long as the choice is kept through diffraction-related calculations. The resulting difference between two choices is the signs of diffraction orders, e.g.,   in the first choice becomes   in the second choice. When solved for diffracted angle at which the diffracted wave intensity are maximized, the equation becomes
 

The diffracted light that corresponds to direct transmission for a transmissive diffraction grating or specular reflection for a reflective grating is called the zero order, and is denoted  . The other diffracted light intensity maxima occur at angles   represented by non-zero integer diffraction orders  . Note that   can be positive or negative, corresponding to diffracted orders on the both sides of the zero order diffracted beam.

Even if the grating equation is derived from a specific grating such as the grating in the right diagram (This grating is called a blazed grating.), the equation can apply to any regular structure of the same spacing, because the phase relationship between light scattered from adjacent diffracting elements of the grating remains the same. The detailed diffracted light property distribution (e.g., intensity) depends on the detailed structure of the grating elements as well as on the number of elements in the grating, but it always gives maxima in the directions given by the grating equation.

Depending on how a grating modulates incident light on it to cause the diffracted light, there are the following grating types.[21]

  • Transmission amplitude diffraction grating, that spatially and periodically modulates the intensity of an incident wave that transmits though the grating (and the diffracted wave is the consequence from this modulation).
  • Reflection amplitude diffraction gratings, that spatially and periodically modulates the intensity of an incident wave that is reflected from the grating.
  • Transmission phase diffraction grating, that spatially and periodically modulates the phase of an incident wave passing though the grating.
  • Reflection phase diffraction grating, that spatially and periodically modulates the phase of an incident wave reflected from the grating.

An optical axis diffraction grating, in which the optical axis is spatially and periodically modulated, is also considered a either reflection or transmission phase diffraction grating.

The grating equation applies to all these gratings due to the same phase relationship between the diffracted waves from adjacent diffracting elements of the gratings, even if the detailed distribution of the diffracted wave property depends on the detailed structure of each grating.

Quantum electrodynamics

 
A helical fluorescent lamp photographed in a reflection diffraction-grating, showing the various spectral lines produced by the lamp.

Quantum electrodynamics (QED) offers another derivation of the properties of a diffraction grating in terms of photons as particles (at some level). QED can be described intuitively with the path integral formulation of quantum mechanics. As such it can model photons as potentially following all paths from a source to a final point, each path with a certain probability amplitude. These probability amplitudes can be represented as a complex number or equivalent vector—or, as Richard Feynman simply calls them in his book on QED, "arrows".

For the probability that a certain event will happen, one sums the probability amplitudes for all of the possible ways in which the event can occur, and then takes the square of the length of the result. The probability amplitude for a photon from a monochromatic source to arrive at a certain final point at a given time, in this case, can be modeled as an arrow that spins rapidly until it is evaluated when the photon reaches its final point. For example, for the probability that a photon will reflect off of a mirror and be observed at a given point a given amount of time later, one sets the photon's probability amplitude spinning as it leaves the source, follows it to the mirror, and then to its final point, even for paths that do not involve bouncing off of the mirror at equal angles. One can then evaluate the probability amplitude at the photon's final point; next, one can integrate over all of these arrows (see vector sum), and square the length of the result to obtain the probability that this photon will reflect off of the mirror in the pertinent fashion. The times these paths take are what determine the angle of the probability amplitude arrow, as they can be said to "spin" at a constant rate (which is related to the frequency of the photon).

The times of the paths near the classical reflection site of the mirror are nearly the same, so the probability amplitudes point in nearly the same direction—thus, they have a sizable sum. Examining the paths towards the edges of the mirror reveals that the times of nearby paths are quite different from each other, and thus we wind up summing vectors that cancel out quickly. So, there is a higher probability that light will follow a near-classical reflection path than a path further out. However, a diffraction grating can be made out of this mirror, by scraping away areas near the edge of the mirror that usually cancel nearby amplitudes out—but now, since the photons don't reflect from the scraped-off portions, the probability amplitudes that would all point, for instance, at forty-five degrees, can have a sizable sum. Thus, this lets light of the right frequency sum to a larger probability amplitude, and as such possess a larger probability of reaching the appropriate final point.

This particular description involves many simplifications: a point source, a "surface" that light can reflect off of (thus neglecting the interactions with electrons) and so forth. The biggest simplification is perhaps in the fact that the "spinning" of the probability amplitude arrows is actually more accurately explained as a "spinning" of the source, as the probability amplitudes of photons do not "spin" while they are in transit. We obtain the same variation in probability amplitudes by letting the time at which the photon left the source be indeterminate—and the time of the path now tells us when the photon would have left the source, and thus what the angle of its "arrow" would be. However, this model and approximation is a reasonable one to illustrate a diffraction grating conceptually. Light of a different frequency may also reflect off of the same diffraction grating, but with a different final point.[22]

Gratings as dispersive elements

The wavelength dependence in the grating equation shows that the grating separates an incident polychromatic beam into its constituent wavelength components at different angles, i.e., it is angular dispersive. Each wavelength of input beam spectrum is sent into a different direction, producing a rainbow of colors under white light illumination. This is visually similar to the operation of a prism, although the mechanism is very different. A prism refracts waves of different wavelengths at different angles due to their different refractive indices, while a grating diffracts different wavelengths at different angles due to interference at each wavelength.

 
A light bulb of a flashlight seen through a transmissive grating, showing two diffracted orders. The order m = 0 corresponds to a direct transmission of light through the grating. In the first positive order (m = +1), colors with increasing wavelengths (from blue to red) are diffracted at increasing angles.

The diffracted beams corresponding to consecutive orders may overlap, depending on the spectral content of the incident beam and the grating density. The higher the spectral order, the greater the overlap into the next order.

 
An argon laser beam consisting of multiple colors (wavelengths) strikes a silicon diffraction mirror grating and is separated into several beams, one for each wavelength. The wavelengths are (left to right) 458 nm, 476 nm, 488 nm, 497 nm, 502 nm, and 515 nm.

The grating equation shows that the angles of the diffracted orders only depend on the grooves' period, and not on their shape. By controlling the cross-sectional profile of the grooves, it is possible to concentrate most of the diffracted optical energy in a particular order for a given wavelength. A triangular profile is commonly used. This technique is called blazing. The incident angle and wavelength for which the diffraction is most efficient (the ratio of the diffracted optical energy to the incident energy is the highest) are often called blazing angle and blazing wavelength. The efficiency of a grating may also depend on the polarization of the incident light. Gratings are usually designated by their groove density, the number of grooves per unit length, usually expressed in grooves per millimeter (g/mm), also equal to the inverse of the groove period. The groove period must be on the order of the wavelength of interest; the spectral range covered by a grating is dependent on groove spacing and is the same for ruled and holographic gratings with the same grating constant (meaning groove density or the groove period). The maximum wavelength that a grating can diffract is equal to twice the grating period, in which case the incident and diffracted light are at ninety degrees (90°) to the grating normal. To obtain frequency dispersion over a wider frequency one must use a prism. The optical regime, in which the use of gratings is most common, corresponds to wavelengths between 100 nm and 10 µm. In that case, the groove density can vary from a few tens of grooves per millimeter, as in echelle gratings, to a few thousands of grooves per millimeter.

When groove spacing is less than half the wavelength of light, the only present order is the m = 0 order. Gratings with such small periodicity (with respect to the incident light wavelength) are called subwavelength gratings and exhibit special optical properties. Made on an isotropic material the subwavelength gratings give rise to form birefringence, in which the material behaves as if it were birefringent.

Fabrication

 
Diffraction grating etched on plates.

SR (Surface Relief) gratings

SR gratings are named due to its surface structure of depressions (low relief) and elevations (high relief). Originally, high-resolution gratings were ruled by high-quality ruling engines whose construction was a large undertaking. Henry Joseph Grayson designed a machine to make diffraction gratings, succeeding with one of 120,000 lines to the inch (approx. 4,724 lines per mm) in 1899. Later, photolithographic techniques created gratings via holographic interference patterns. A holographic grating has sinusoidal grooves as the result of an optical sinusoidal interference pattern on the grating material during its fabrication, and may not be as efficient as ruled gratings, but are often preferred in monochromators because they produce less stray light. A copying technique can make high quality replicas from master gratings of either type, thereby lowering fabrication costs.

Semiconductor technology today is also utilized to etch holographically patterned gratings into robust materials such as fused silica. In this way, low stray-light holography is combined with the high efficiency of deep, etched transmission gratings, and can be incorporated into high volume, low cost semiconductor manufacturing technology.

VPH (Volume Phase Holography) gratings

Another method for manufacturing diffraction gratings uses a photosensitive gel sandwiched between two substrates. A holographic interference pattern exposes the gel, which is later developed. These gratings, called volume phase holography diffraction gratings (or VPH diffraction gratings) have no physical grooves, but instead a periodic modulation of the refractive index within the gel. This removes much of the surface scattering effects typically seen in other types of gratings. These gratings also tend to have higher efficiencies, and allow for the inclusion of complicated patterns into a single grating. A VPH diffraction grating is typically a transmission grating, through which incident light passes and is diffracted, but a VPH reflection grating can also be made by tilting the direction of a refractive index modulation with respect to the grating surface.[23] In older versions of such gratings, environmental susceptibility was a trade-off, as the gel had to be contained at low temperature and humidity. Typically, the photosensitive substances are sealed between two substrates that make them resistant to humidity, and thermal and mechanical stresses. VPH diffraction gratings are not destroyed by accidental touches and are more scratch resistant than typical relief gratings.

Other gratings

A new technology for grating insertion into integrated photonic lightwave circuits is digital planar holography (DPH). DPH gratings are generated in computer and fabricated on one or several interfaces of an optical waveguide planar by using standard micro-lithography or nano-imprinting methods, compatible with mass-production. Light propagates inside the DPH gratings, confined by the refractive index gradient, which provides longer interaction path and greater flexibility in light steering.

Examples

 
The grooves of a compact disc can act as a grating and produce iridescent reflections.

Diffraction gratings are often used in monochromators, spectrometers, lasers, wavelength division multiplexing devices, optical pulse compressing devices, and many other optical instruments.

Ordinary pressed CD and DVD media are every-day examples of diffraction gratings and can be used to demonstrate the effect by reflecting sunlight off them onto a white wall. This is a side effect of their manufacture, as one surface of a CD has many small pits in the plastic, arranged in a spiral; that surface has a thin layer of metal applied to make the pits more visible. The structure of a DVD is optically similar, although it may have more than one pitted surface, and all pitted surfaces are inside the disc.[24][25]

Due to the sensitivity to the refractive index of the media, diffraction grating can be used as sensor of fluid properties.[26]

In a standard pressed vinyl record when viewed from a low angle perpendicular to the grooves, a similar but less defined effect to that in a CD/DVD is seen. This is due to viewing angle (less than the critical angle of reflection of the black vinyl) and the path of the light being reflected due to this being changed by the grooves, leaving a rainbow relief pattern behind.

Diffraction gratings are also used to distribute evenly the frontlight of e-readers such as the Nook Simple Touch with GlowLight.[27]

Gratings from electronic components

 
Diffraction of a spotlight over a mobile phone

Some everyday electronic components contain fine and regular patterns, and as a result readily serve as diffraction gratings. For example, CCD sensors from discarded mobile phones and cameras can be removed from the device. With a laser pointer, diffraction can reveal the spatial structure of the CCD sensors.[28] This can be done for LCD or LED displays of smart phones as well. Because such displays are usually protected just by transparent casing, experiments can be done without damaging the phones. If accurate measurements are not intended, a spotlight can reveal the diffraction patterns.

Natural gratings

 
A biofilm on the surface of a fishtank produces diffraction grating effects when the bacteria are all evenly sized and spaced. Such phenomena are an example of Quetelet rings.

Striated muscle is the most commonly found natural diffraction grating[29] and, this has helped physiologists in determining the structure of such muscle. Aside from this, the chemical structure of crystals can be thought of as diffraction gratings for types of electromagnetic radiation other than visible light, this is the basis for techniques such as X-ray crystallography.

Most commonly confused with diffraction gratings are the iridescent colors of peacock feathers, mother-of-pearl, and butterfly wings. Iridescence in birds,[30] fish[31] and insects[30][32] is often caused by thin-film interference rather than a diffraction grating. Diffraction produces the entire spectrum of colors as the viewing angle changes, whereas thin-film interference usually produces a much narrower range. The surfaces of flowers can also create a diffraction, but the cell structures in plants are usually too irregular to produce the fine slit geometry necessary for a diffraction grating.[33] The iridescence signal of flowers is thus only appreciable very locally and hence not visible to man and flower visiting insects.[34][35] However, natural gratings do occur in some invertebrate animals, like the peacock spiders,[36] the antennae of seed shrimp, and have even been discovered in Burgess Shale fossils.[37][38]

Diffraction grating effects are sometimes seen in meteorology. Diffraction coronas are colorful rings surrounding a source of light, such as the sun. These are usually observed much closer to the light source than halos, and are caused by very fine particles, like water droplets, ice crystals, or smoke particles in a hazy sky. When the particles are all nearly the same size they diffract the incoming light at very specific angles. The exact angle depends on the size of the particles. Diffraction coronas are commonly observed around light sources, like candle flames or street lights, in the fog. Cloud iridescence is caused by diffraction, occurring along coronal rings when the particles in the clouds are all uniform in size.[39]

See also

Notes

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  2. ^ Kinoshita, S.; Yoshioka, S.; Miyazaki, J. (2008). "Physics of structural colors". Reports on Progress in Physics. 71 (7): 076401. Bibcode:2008RPPh...71g6401K. doi:10.1088/0034-4885/71/7/076401. S2CID 53068819.
  3. ^ "Optical Encoders". Celera motion. from the original on 12 August 2020. Retrieved 1 November 2021.
  4. ^ Paul M, Blanchard; David J, Fisher; Simon C, Woods; Alan H, Greenaway (2000). "Phase-diversity wave-front sensing with a distorted diffraction grating". Applied Optics. 39 (35): 6649–6655. Bibcode:2000ApOpt..39.6649B. doi:10.1364/AO.39.006649. PMID 18354679.
  5. ^ Hiroshi, Ohba; Shinichi, Komatsu (1998). "Wavefront Sensor Using a 2-Dimensional Diffraction Grating". Japanese Journal of Applied Physics. 37 (6B): 3749–3753. Bibcode:1998JaJAP..37.3749O. doi:10.1143/JJAP.37.3749. S2CID 121954416.
  6. ^ "Introduction to Diffraction Grating" (PDF). Thor Labs. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022. Retrieved 30 April 2020.
  7. ^ AK Yetisen; H Butt; F da Cruz Vasconcellos; Y Montelongo; CAB Davidson; J Blyth; JB Carmody; S Vignolini; U Steiner; JJ Baumberg; TD Wilkinson; CR Lowe (2013). "Light-Directed Writing of Chemically Tunable Narrow-Band Holographic Sensors". Advanced Optical Materials. 2 (3): 250–254. doi:10.1002/adom.201300375. S2CID 96257175.
  8. ^ Letter from James Gregory to John Collins, dated 13 May 1673. Reprinted in: Rigaud, Stephen Jordan, ed. (1841). Correspondence of Scientific Men of the Seventeenth Century …. Vol. 2. Oxford University Press. pp. 251–5. especially p. 254
  9. ^ Hopkinson, F.; Rittenhouse, David (1786). "An optical problem, proposed by Mr. Hopkinson, and solved by Mr. Rittenhouse". Transactions of the American Philosophical Society. 2: 201–6. doi:10.2307/1005186. JSTOR 1005186.
  10. ^ Thomas D. Cope (1932) "The Rittenhouse diffraction grating". Reprinted in: Rittenhouse, David (1980). Hindle, Brooke (ed.). The Scientific Writings of David Rittenhouse. Arno Press. pp. 377–382. Bibcode:1980swdr.book.....R. ISBN 9780405125683. (A reproduction of Rittenhouse's letter re his diffraction grating appears on pp. 369–374.)
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  13. ^ Thomas Young (1 January 1804). "The Bakerian Lecture: Experiments and calculations relative to physical optics". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. 94: 1–16. Bibcode:1804RSPT...94....1Y. doi:10.1098/rstl.1804.0001. S2CID 110408369.. (Note: This lecture was presented before the Royal Society on 24 November 1803.)
  14. ^ Fresnel, Augustin-Jean (1816), "Mémoire sur la diffraction de la lumière" ("Memoir on the diffraction of light"), Annales de Chimie et de Physique, vol. 1, pp. 239–81 (March 1816); reprinted as "Deuxième Mémoire…" ("Second Memoir…") in Oeuvres complètes d'Augustin Fresnel, vol. 1 (Paris: Imprimerie Impériale, 1866), pp. 89–122. (Revision of the "First Memoir" submitted on 15 October 1815.)
  15. ^ Fresnel, Augustin-Jean (1818), "Mémoire sur la diffraction de la lumière" ("Memoir on the diffraction of light"), deposited 29 July 1818, "crowned" 15 March 1819, published in Mémoires de l'Académie Royale des Sciences de l'Institut de France, vol. V (for 1821 & 1822, printed 1826), pp. 339–475; reprinted in Oeuvres complètes d'Augustin Fresnel, vol. 1 (Paris: Imprimerie Impériale, 1866), pp. 247–364; partly translated as "Fresnel's prize memoir on the diffraction of light", in H. Crew (ed.), The Wave Theory of Light: Memoirs by Huygens, Young and Fresnel, American Book Company, 1900, pp. 81–144. (First published, as extracts only, in Annales de Chimie et de Physique, vol. 11 (1819), pp. 246–96, 337–78.)
  16. ^ Turner, G. L'E. (1967). "The contributions to Science of Friedrich Adolph Nobert". Bulletin of the Institute of Physics and the Physical Society. 18 (10): 338–348. doi:10.1088/0031-9112/18/10/006.
  17. ^ Warner, Deborah J. (1971). "Lewis M. Rutherfurd: Pioneer Astronomical Photographer and Spectroscopist". Technology and Culture. 12 (2): 190–216. doi:10.2307/3102525. JSTOR 3102525.
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  19. ^ Hentschel, Klaus (1993). "The Discovery of the Redshift of Solar Fraunhofer Lines by Rowland and Jewell in Baltimore around 1890" (PDF). Historical Studies in the Physical and Biological Sciences. 23 (2): 219–277. doi:10.2307/27757699. JSTOR 27757699. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022.
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  24. ^ Ambient Diagnostics by Yang Cai -- CRC Press 2014 Page 267
  25. ^ http://www.nnin.org/sites/default/files/files/Karen_Rama_USING_CDs_AND_DVDs_AS_DIFFRACTION_GRATINGS_0.pdf[bare URL PDF]
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  27. ^ "Step 17". Nook Simple Touch with GlowLight Teardown. iFixit. 2012.
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  30. ^ a b Stavenga, D. G. (2014). "Thin Film and Multilayer Optics Cause Structural Colors of Many Insects and Birds". Materials Today: Proceedings. 1: 109–121. doi:10.1016/j.matpr.2014.09.007.
  31. ^ Roberts, N. W.; Marshall, N. J.; Cronin, T. W. (2012). "High levels of reflectivity and pointillist structural color in fish, cephalopods, and beetles". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 109 (50): E3387. Bibcode:2012PNAS..109E3387R. doi:10.1073/pnas.1216282109. PMC 3528518. PMID 23132935.
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  34. ^ Lee, David W. (2007). Nature's Palette: The Science of Plant Color. University of Chicago Press. pp. 255–6. ISBN 978-0-226-47105-1.
  35. ^ Van Der Kooi, C. J.; Dyer, A. G.; Stavenga, D. G. (2015). "Is floral iridescence a biologically relevant cue in plant-pollinator signaling?" (PDF). New Phytologist. 205 (1): 18–20. doi:10.1111/nph.13066. PMID 25243861.
  36. ^ Hsiung, Bor-Kai; Siddique, Radwanul Hasan; Stavenga, Doekele G.; Otto, Jürgen C.; Allen, Michael C.; Liu, Ying; Lu, Yong-Feng; Deheyn, Dimitri D.; Shawkey, Matthew D. (22 December 2017). "Rainbow peacock spiders inspire miniature super-iridescent optics". Nature Communications. 8 (1): 2278. Bibcode:2017NatCo...8.2278H. doi:10.1038/s41467-017-02451-x. ISSN 2041-1723. PMC 5741626. PMID 29273708.
  37. ^ Lee 2007, p. 41
  38. ^ . News. Natural History Museum. 15 March 2006. Archived from the original on 12 August 2010. Retrieved 14 September 2010.
  39. ^ Können, G. P. (1985). Polarized Light in Nature. Cambridge University Press. pp. 72–73. ISBN 978-0-521-25862-3.

References

  •   This article incorporates public domain material from . General Services Administration. Archived from the original on 22 January 2022.
  • Hutley, Michael (1982). Diffraction Gratings. Techniques of Physics. Vol. 6. Academic Press. ISBN 978-0-12-362980-7. ISSN 0308-5392.
  • Loewen, Erwin; Popov, Evgeny (1997). Diffraction Gratings and Applications. CRC. ISBN 978-0-8247-9923-6.
  • Palmer, Christopher (2020). "Diffraction Grating Handbook" (8th ed.). MKS Newport.
  • Greenslade, Thomas B. (2004). "Wire Diffraction Gratings". The Physics Teacher. 42 (2): 76–77. Bibcode:2004PhTea..42...76G. doi:10.1119/1.1646480.
  • Abrahams, Peter. "Early Instruments of Astronomical Spectroscopy".
  • Grossman, William E. L. (September 1993). "The optical characteristics and production of diffraction gratings: A quantitative explanation of their experimental qualities with a description of their manufacture and relative merits". J. Chem. Educ. 70 (9): 741. Bibcode:1993JChEd..70..741G. doi:10.1021/ed070p741.
  • "Volume phase holography gratings". National Optical Astronomy Observatories.

External links

  • Diffraction Gratings Lecture 9, Youtube
  • Diffraction Gratings — The Crucial Dispersive Element
  • Optics Tutorial — Diffraction Gratings Ruled & Holographic
  • Ray-Tracing program handling general reflective concave gratings for Windows XP and above
  • Interference in Diffraction Grating Beams -Wolfram demonstration

diffraction, grating, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, december, 2011, learn, when, remove, this, template, mes. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations December 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message In optics a diffraction grating is an optical component with a periodic structure that diffracts light into several beams travelling in different directions i e different diffraction angles The emerging coloration is a form of structural coloration 1 2 The directions or diffraction angles of these beams depend on the wave light incident angle to the diffraction grating the spacing or distance between adjacent diffracting elements e g parallel slits for a transmission grating on the grating and the wavelength of the incident light The grating acts as a dispersive element Because of this diffraction gratings are commonly used in monochromators and spectrometers but other applications are also possible such as optical encoders for high precision motion control 3 and wavefront measurement 4 5 A very large reflecting diffraction grating An incandescent light bulb viewed through a diffractive effects filter For typical applications a reflective grating has ridges or rulings on its surface while a transmissive grating has transmissive or hollow slits on its surface 6 Such a grating modulates the amplitude of an incident wave on it to create a diffraction pattern There are also gratings that modulate the phases of incident waves rather than the amplitude and these type of gratings can be produced frequently by using holography 7 James Gregory 1638 1675 observed the diffraction patterns caused by a bird feather which was effectively the first diffraction grating in a natural form to be discovered about a year after Isaac Newton s prism experiments 8 The first man made diffraction grating was made around 1785 by Philadelphia inventor David Rittenhouse who strung hairs between two finely threaded screws 9 10 This was similar to notable German physicist Joseph von Fraunhofer s wire diffraction grating in 1821 11 12 The principles of diffraction were discovered by Thomas Young 13 and Augustin Jean Fresnel 14 15 Using these principles Fraunhofer was the first who used a diffraction grating to obtain line spectra and the first who measured the wavelengths of spectral lines with a diffraction grating Gratings with the lowest line distance d were created in the 1860s by Friedrich Adolph Nobert 1806 1881 in Greifswald 16 then the two Americans Lewis Morris Rutherfurd 1816 1892 and William B Rogers 1804 1882 took over the lead 17 18 and by the end of the 19th century the concave gratings of Henry Augustus Rowland 1848 1901 were the best available 19 20 A diffraction grating can create rainbow colors when it is illuminated by a wide spectrum e g continuous light source Rainbow like colors from closely spaced narrow tracks on optical data storage disks such as CDs or DVDs are an example of light diffraction caused by diffraction gratings A usual diffraction grating has parallel lines It is true for 1 dimensional gratings but 2 or 3 dimensional gratings are also possible and they have their own applications such as wavefront measurement while a CD has a spiral of finely spaced data tracks Diffraction colors also appear when one looks at a bright point source through a translucent fine pitch umbrella fabric covering Decorative patterned plastic films based on reflective grating patches are inexpensive and commonplace A similar color separation seen from thin layers of oil or gasoline etc on water known as iridescence are not caused by diffraction from a grating but rather by thin film interference from the closely stacked transmissive layers Contents 1 Theory of operation 1 1 Quantum electrodynamics 2 Gratings as dispersive elements 3 Fabrication 3 1 SR Surface Relief gratings 3 2 VPH Volume Phase Holography gratings 3 3 Other gratings 4 Examples 4 1 Gratings from electronic components 4 2 Natural gratings 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksTheory of operation EditMain article Diffraction A diffraction grating reflecting only the green portion of the spectrum from a room s fluorescent lightingFor a diffraction grating the relationship between the grating spacing i e the distance between adjacent grating grooves or slits the angle of the wave light incidence to the grating and the diffracted wave from the grating is known as the grating equation Like many other optical formulas the grating equation can be derived by using the Huygens Fresnel principle stating that each point on a wavefront of a propagating wave can be considered to act as a point wave source and a wavefront at any subsequent point can be found by adding together the contributions from each of these individual point wave sources on the previous wavefront Gratings may be of the reflective or transmissive type analogous to a mirror or lens respectively A grating has a zero order mode where the integer order of diffraction m is set to zero in which a ray of light behaves according to the laws of reflection like a mirror and refraction like a lens respectively A diagram showing the path difference between rays of light scattered from adjacent rulings at the same local position on each ruling of a reflective diffraction grating actually a blazed grating The choice of or in the path difference formula depends on which ray path is the reference from which the difference is calculated Note that the pair of the black ray path parts and the pair of the light green ray path parts have no path difference in each pair while there is a path difference in the red ray path part pair that matters in the diffraction grating equation derivation An idealized diffraction grating is made up of a set of slits of spacing d displaystyle d that must be wider than the wavelength of interest to cause diffraction Assuming a plane wave of monochromatic light of wavelength l displaystyle lambda at normal incidence on a grating I e wavefronts of the incident wave are parallel to the grating main plane each slit in the grating acts as a quasi point wave source from which light propagates in all directions although this is typically limited to the forward hemisphere from the point source Of course every point on every slit to which the incident wave reaches plays as a point wave source for the diffraction wave and all these contributions to the diffraction wave determine the detailed diffraction wave light property distribution but diffraction angles at the grating at which the diffraction wave intensity is highest are determined only by these quasi point sources corresponding the slits in the grating After the incident light wave interacts with the grating the resulting diffracted light from the grating is composed of the sum of interfering wave components emanating from each slit in the grating At any given point in space through which the diffracted light may pass typically called observation point the path length from each slit in the grating to the given point varies so the phase of the wave emanating from each of the slits at that point also varies As a result the sum of the diffracted waves from the grating slits at the given observation point creates a peak valley or some degree between them in light intensity through additive and destructive interference When the difference between the light paths from adjacent slits to the observation point is equal to an odd integer multiple of the half of the wavelength ll l 2 displaystyle l lambda 2 with an odd integer l displaystyle l the waves are out of phase at that point and thus cancel each other to create the locally minimum light intensity Similarly when the path difference is a multiple of l displaystyle lambda the waves are in phase and the locally maximum intensity occurs For light at the normal incidence to the grating the intensity maxima occur at diffraction angles 8 m displaystyle theta m which satisfy the relationship d sin 8 m m l displaystyle d sin theta m m lambda where 8 m displaystyle theta m is the angle between the diffracted ray and the grating s normal vector d displaystyle d is the distance from the center of one slit to the center of the adjacent slit and m displaystyle m is an integer representing the propagation mode of interest called the diffraction order Comparison of the spectra obtained from a diffraction grating by diffraction 1 and a prism by refraction 2 Longer wavelengths red are diffracted more but refracted less than shorter wavelengths violet Intensity as heatmap for monochromatic light behind a grating When a plane light wave is normally incident on the grating the diffracted light has maxima at diffraction angles 8 m displaystyle theta m given by the diffraction equation asd sin 8 m m l displaystyle d sin theta m m lambda It can be shown that if the plane wave is incident at any arbitrary angle 8 i displaystyle theta i to the grating normal the grating equation becomesd sin 8 i sin 8 m m l displaystyle d sin theta i sin theta m m lambda or d sin 8 m sin 8 i m l displaystyle d sin theta m sin theta i m lambda Either choice is fine as long as the choice is kept through diffraction related calculations The resulting difference between two choices is the signs of diffraction orders e g m 1 displaystyle m 1 in the first choice becomes m 1 displaystyle m 1 in the second choice When solved for diffracted angle at which the diffracted wave intensity are maximized the equation becomes 8 m arcsin sin 8 i m l d displaystyle theta m arcsin left sin theta i frac m lambda d right The diffracted light that corresponds to direct transmission for a transmissive diffraction grating or specular reflection for a reflective grating is called the zero order and is denoted m 0 displaystyle m 0 The other diffracted light intensity maxima occur at angles 8 m displaystyle theta m represented by non zero integer diffraction orders m displaystyle m Note that m displaystyle m can be positive or negative corresponding to diffracted orders on the both sides of the zero order diffracted beam Even if the grating equation is derived from a specific grating such as the grating in the right diagram This grating is called a blazed grating the equation can apply to any regular structure of the same spacing because the phase relationship between light scattered from adjacent diffracting elements of the grating remains the same The detailed diffracted light property distribution e g intensity depends on the detailed structure of the grating elements as well as on the number of elements in the grating but it always gives maxima in the directions given by the grating equation Depending on how a grating modulates incident light on it to cause the diffracted light there are the following grating types 21 Transmission amplitude diffraction grating that spatially and periodically modulates the intensity of an incident wave that transmits though the grating and the diffracted wave is the consequence from this modulation Reflection amplitude diffraction gratings that spatially and periodically modulates the intensity of an incident wave that is reflected from the grating Transmission phase diffraction grating that spatially and periodically modulates the phase of an incident wave passing though the grating Reflection phase diffraction grating that spatially and periodically modulates the phase of an incident wave reflected from the grating An optical axis diffraction grating in which the optical axis is spatially and periodically modulated is also considered a either reflection or transmission phase diffraction grating The grating equation applies to all these gratings due to the same phase relationship between the diffracted waves from adjacent diffracting elements of the gratings even if the detailed distribution of the diffracted wave property depends on the detailed structure of each grating Quantum electrodynamics Edit A helical fluorescent lamp photographed in a reflection diffraction grating showing the various spectral lines produced by the lamp Quantum electrodynamics QED offers another derivation of the properties of a diffraction grating in terms of photons as particles at some level QED can be described intuitively with the path integral formulation of quantum mechanics As such it can model photons as potentially following all paths from a source to a final point each path with a certain probability amplitude These probability amplitudes can be represented as a complex number or equivalent vector or as Richard Feynman simply calls them in his book on QED arrows For the probability that a certain event will happen one sums the probability amplitudes for all of the possible ways in which the event can occur and then takes the square of the length of the result The probability amplitude for a photon from a monochromatic source to arrive at a certain final point at a given time in this case can be modeled as an arrow that spins rapidly until it is evaluated when the photon reaches its final point For example for the probability that a photon will reflect off of a mirror and be observed at a given point a given amount of time later one sets the photon s probability amplitude spinning as it leaves the source follows it to the mirror and then to its final point even for paths that do not involve bouncing off of the mirror at equal angles One can then evaluate the probability amplitude at the photon s final point next one can integrate over all of these arrows see vector sum and square the length of the result to obtain the probability that this photon will reflect off of the mirror in the pertinent fashion The times these paths take are what determine the angle of the probability amplitude arrow as they can be said to spin at a constant rate which is related to the frequency of the photon The times of the paths near the classical reflection site of the mirror are nearly the same so the probability amplitudes point in nearly the same direction thus they have a sizable sum Examining the paths towards the edges of the mirror reveals that the times of nearby paths are quite different from each other and thus we wind up summing vectors that cancel out quickly So there is a higher probability that light will follow a near classical reflection path than a path further out However a diffraction grating can be made out of this mirror by scraping away areas near the edge of the mirror that usually cancel nearby amplitudes out but now since the photons don t reflect from the scraped off portions the probability amplitudes that would all point for instance at forty five degrees can have a sizable sum Thus this lets light of the right frequency sum to a larger probability amplitude and as such possess a larger probability of reaching the appropriate final point This particular description involves many simplifications a point source a surface that light can reflect off of thus neglecting the interactions with electrons and so forth The biggest simplification is perhaps in the fact that the spinning of the probability amplitude arrows is actually more accurately explained as a spinning of the source as the probability amplitudes of photons do not spin while they are in transit We obtain the same variation in probability amplitudes by letting the time at which the photon left the source be indeterminate and the time of the path now tells us when the photon would have left the source and thus what the angle of its arrow would be However this model and approximation is a reasonable one to illustrate a diffraction grating conceptually Light of a different frequency may also reflect off of the same diffraction grating but with a different final point 22 Gratings as dispersive elements EditThe wavelength dependence in the grating equation shows that the grating separates an incident polychromatic beam into its constituent wavelength components at different angles i e it is angular dispersive Each wavelength of input beam spectrum is sent into a different direction producing a rainbow of colors under white light illumination This is visually similar to the operation of a prism although the mechanism is very different A prism refracts waves of different wavelengths at different angles due to their different refractive indices while a grating diffracts different wavelengths at different angles due to interference at each wavelength A light bulb of a flashlight seen through a transmissive grating showing two diffracted orders The order m 0 corresponds to a direct transmission of light through the grating In the first positive order m 1 colors with increasing wavelengths from blue to red are diffracted at increasing angles The diffracted beams corresponding to consecutive orders may overlap depending on the spectral content of the incident beam and the grating density The higher the spectral order the greater the overlap into the next order An argon laser beam consisting of multiple colors wavelengths strikes a silicon diffraction mirror grating and is separated into several beams one for each wavelength The wavelengths are left to right 458 nm 476 nm 488 nm 497 nm 502 nm and 515 nm The grating equation shows that the angles of the diffracted orders only depend on the grooves period and not on their shape By controlling the cross sectional profile of the grooves it is possible to concentrate most of the diffracted optical energy in a particular order for a given wavelength A triangular profile is commonly used This technique is called blazing The incident angle and wavelength for which the diffraction is most efficient the ratio of the diffracted optical energy to the incident energy is the highest are often called blazing angle and blazing wavelength The efficiency of a grating may also depend on the polarization of the incident light Gratings are usually designated by their groove density the number of grooves per unit length usually expressed in grooves per millimeter g mm also equal to the inverse of the groove period The groove period must be on the order of the wavelength of interest the spectral range covered by a grating is dependent on groove spacing and is the same for ruled and holographic gratings with the same grating constant meaning groove density or the groove period The maximum wavelength that a grating can diffract is equal to twice the grating period in which case the incident and diffracted light are at ninety degrees 90 to the grating normal To obtain frequency dispersion over a wider frequency one must use a prism The optical regime in which the use of gratings is most common corresponds to wavelengths between 100 nm and 10 µm In that case the groove density can vary from a few tens of grooves per millimeter as in echelle gratings to a few thousands of grooves per millimeter When groove spacing is less than half the wavelength of light the only present order is the m 0 order Gratings with such small periodicity with respect to the incident light wavelength are called subwavelength gratings and exhibit special optical properties Made on an isotropic material the subwavelength gratings give rise to form birefringence in which the material behaves as if it were birefringent Fabrication Edit Diffraction grating etched on plates SR Surface Relief gratings Edit SR gratings are named due to its surface structure of depressions low relief and elevations high relief Originally high resolution gratings were ruled by high quality ruling engines whose construction was a large undertaking Henry Joseph Grayson designed a machine to make diffraction gratings succeeding with one of 120 000 lines to the inch approx 4 724 lines per mm in 1899 Later photolithographic techniques created gratings via holographic interference patterns A holographic grating has sinusoidal grooves as the result of an optical sinusoidal interference pattern on the grating material during its fabrication and may not be as efficient as ruled gratings but are often preferred in monochromators because they produce less stray light A copying technique can make high quality replicas from master gratings of either type thereby lowering fabrication costs Semiconductor technology today is also utilized to etch holographically patterned gratings into robust materials such as fused silica In this way low stray light holography is combined with the high efficiency of deep etched transmission gratings and can be incorporated into high volume low cost semiconductor manufacturing technology VPH Volume Phase Holography gratings Edit Another method for manufacturing diffraction gratings uses a photosensitive gel sandwiched between two substrates A holographic interference pattern exposes the gel which is later developed These gratings called volume phase holography diffraction gratings or VPH diffraction gratings have no physical grooves but instead a periodic modulation of the refractive index within the gel This removes much of the surface scattering effects typically seen in other types of gratings These gratings also tend to have higher efficiencies and allow for the inclusion of complicated patterns into a single grating A VPH diffraction grating is typically a transmission grating through which incident light passes and is diffracted but a VPH reflection grating can also be made by tilting the direction of a refractive index modulation with respect to the grating surface 23 In older versions of such gratings environmental susceptibility was a trade off as the gel had to be contained at low temperature and humidity Typically the photosensitive substances are sealed between two substrates that make them resistant to humidity and thermal and mechanical stresses VPH diffraction gratings are not destroyed by accidental touches and are more scratch resistant than typical relief gratings Other gratings Edit A new technology for grating insertion into integrated photonic lightwave circuits is digital planar holography DPH DPH gratings are generated in computer and fabricated on one or several interfaces of an optical waveguide planar by using standard micro lithography or nano imprinting methods compatible with mass production Light propagates inside the DPH gratings confined by the refractive index gradient which provides longer interaction path and greater flexibility in light steering Examples Edit The grooves of a compact disc can act as a grating and produce iridescent reflections Diffraction gratings are often used in monochromators spectrometers lasers wavelength division multiplexing devices optical pulse compressing devices and many other optical instruments Ordinary pressed CD and DVD media are every day examples of diffraction gratings and can be used to demonstrate the effect by reflecting sunlight off them onto a white wall This is a side effect of their manufacture as one surface of a CD has many small pits in the plastic arranged in a spiral that surface has a thin layer of metal applied to make the pits more visible The structure of a DVD is optically similar although it may have more than one pitted surface and all pitted surfaces are inside the disc 24 25 Due to the sensitivity to the refractive index of the media diffraction grating can be used as sensor of fluid properties 26 In a standard pressed vinyl record when viewed from a low angle perpendicular to the grooves a similar but less defined effect to that in a CD DVD is seen This is due to viewing angle less than the critical angle of reflection of the black vinyl and the path of the light being reflected due to this being changed by the grooves leaving a rainbow relief pattern behind Diffraction gratings are also used to distribute evenly the frontlight of e readers such as the Nook Simple Touch with GlowLight 27 Gratings from electronic components Edit Diffraction of a spotlight over a mobile phone Some everyday electronic components contain fine and regular patterns and as a result readily serve as diffraction gratings For example CCD sensors from discarded mobile phones and cameras can be removed from the device With a laser pointer diffraction can reveal the spatial structure of the CCD sensors 28 This can be done for LCD or LED displays of smart phones as well Because such displays are usually protected just by transparent casing experiments can be done without damaging the phones If accurate measurements are not intended a spotlight can reveal the diffraction patterns Natural gratings Edit A biofilm on the surface of a fishtank produces diffraction grating effects when the bacteria are all evenly sized and spaced Such phenomena are an example of Quetelet rings Striated muscle is the most commonly found natural diffraction grating 29 and this has helped physiologists in determining the structure of such muscle Aside from this the chemical structure of crystals can be thought of as diffraction gratings for types of electromagnetic radiation other than visible light this is the basis for techniques such as X ray crystallography Most commonly confused with diffraction gratings are the iridescent colors of peacock feathers mother of pearl and butterfly wings Iridescence in birds 30 fish 31 and insects 30 32 is often caused by thin film interference rather than a diffraction grating Diffraction produces the entire spectrum of colors as the viewing angle changes whereas thin film interference usually produces a much narrower range The surfaces of flowers can also create a diffraction but the cell structures in plants are usually too irregular to produce the fine slit geometry necessary for a diffraction grating 33 The iridescence signal of flowers is thus only appreciable very locally and hence not visible to man and flower visiting insects 34 35 However natural gratings do occur in some invertebrate animals like the peacock spiders 36 the antennae of seed shrimp and have even been discovered in Burgess Shale fossils 37 38 Diffraction grating effects are sometimes seen in meteorology Diffraction coronas are colorful rings surrounding a source of light such as the sun These are usually observed much closer to the light source than halos and are caused by very fine particles like water droplets ice crystals or smoke particles in a hazy sky When the particles are all nearly the same size they diffract the incoming light at very specific angles The exact angle depends on the size of the particles Diffraction coronas are commonly observed around light sources like candle flames or street lights in the fog Cloud iridescence is caused by diffraction occurring along coronal rings when the particles in the clouds are all uniform in size 39 See also EditAngle sensitive pixel Blazed grating Diffraction efficiency Diffraction from slits Diffraction spike Diffractive solar sail Echelle grating Fraunhofer diffraction Fraunhofer diffraction mathematics Fresnel diffraction Grism Henry Augustus Rowland Kapitza Dirac effect Kirchhoff s diffraction formula N slit interferometric equation Ultrasonic grating Virtually imaged phased array Zone plateNotes Edit Srinivasarao M 1999 Nano Optics in the Biological World Beetles Butterflies Birds and Moths Chemical Reviews 99 7 1935 1962 doi 10 1021 cr970080y PMID 11849015 Kinoshita S Yoshioka S Miyazaki J 2008 Physics of structural colors Reports on Progress in Physics 71 7 076401 Bibcode 2008RPPh 71g6401K doi 10 1088 0034 4885 71 7 076401 S2CID 53068819 Optical Encoders Celera motion Archived from the original on 12 August 2020 Retrieved 1 November 2021 Paul M Blanchard David J Fisher Simon C Woods Alan H Greenaway 2000 Phase diversity wave front sensing with a distorted diffraction grating Applied Optics 39 35 6649 6655 Bibcode 2000ApOpt 39 6649B doi 10 1364 AO 39 006649 PMID 18354679 Hiroshi Ohba Shinichi Komatsu 1998 Wavefront Sensor Using a 2 Dimensional Diffraction Grating Japanese Journal of Applied Physics 37 6B 3749 3753 Bibcode 1998JaJAP 37 3749O doi 10 1143 JJAP 37 3749 S2CID 121954416 Introduction to Diffraction Grating PDF Thor Labs Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Retrieved 30 April 2020 AK Yetisen H Butt F da Cruz Vasconcellos Y Montelongo CAB Davidson J Blyth JB Carmody S Vignolini U Steiner JJ Baumberg TD Wilkinson CR Lowe 2013 Light Directed Writing of Chemically Tunable Narrow Band Holographic Sensors Advanced Optical Materials 2 3 250 254 doi 10 1002 adom 201300375 S2CID 96257175 Letter from James Gregory to John Collins dated 13 May 1673 Reprinted in Rigaud Stephen Jordan ed 1841 Correspondence of Scientific Men of the Seventeenth Century Vol 2 Oxford University Press pp 251 5 especially p 254 Hopkinson F Rittenhouse David 1786 An optical problem proposed by Mr Hopkinson and solved by Mr Rittenhouse Transactions of the American Philosophical Society 2 201 6 doi 10 2307 1005186 JSTOR 1005186 Thomas D Cope 1932 The Rittenhouse diffraction grating Reprinted in Rittenhouse David 1980 Hindle Brooke ed The Scientific Writings of David Rittenhouse Arno Press pp 377 382 Bibcode 1980swdr book R ISBN 9780405125683 A reproduction of Rittenhouse s letter re his diffraction grating appears on pp 369 374 Fraunhofer Joseph von 1821 Neue Modifikation des Lichtes durch gegenseitige Einwirkung und Beugung der Strahlen und Gesetze derselben New modification of light by the mutual influence and the diffraction of light rays and the laws thereof Denkschriften der Koniglichen Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Munchen Memoirs of the Royal Academy of Science in Munich 8 3 76 Fraunhofer Joseph von 1823 Kurzer Bericht von den Resultaten neuerer Versuche uber die Gesetze des Lichtes und die Theorie derselben Short account of the results of new experiments on the laws of light and the theory thereof Annalen der Physik 74 8 337 378 Bibcode 1823AnP 74 337F doi 10 1002 andp 18230740802 Thomas Young 1 January 1804 The Bakerian Lecture Experiments and calculations relative to physical optics Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London 94 1 16 Bibcode 1804RSPT 94 1Y doi 10 1098 rstl 1804 0001 S2CID 110408369 Note This lecture was presented before the Royal Society on 24 November 1803 Fresnel Augustin Jean 1816 Memoire sur la diffraction de la lumiere Memoir on the diffraction of light Annales de Chimie et de Physique vol 1 pp 239 81 March 1816 reprinted as Deuxieme Memoire Second Memoir in Oeuvres completes d Augustin Fresnel vol 1 Paris Imprimerie Imperiale 1866 pp 89 122 Revision of the First Memoir submitted on 15 October 1815 Fresnel Augustin Jean 1818 Memoire sur la diffraction de la lumiere Memoir on the diffraction of light deposited 29 July 1818 crowned 15 March 1819 published in Memoires de l Academie Royale des Sciences de l Institut de France vol V for 1821 amp 1822 printed 1826 pp 339 475 reprinted in Oeuvres completes d Augustin Fresnel vol 1 Paris Imprimerie Imperiale 1866 pp 247 364 partly translated as Fresnel s prize memoir on the diffraction of light in H 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Juan C Castro Palacio Juan C Monsoriu Juan A March 2014 Diffraction by electronic components of everyday use PDF American Journal of Physics 82 3 257 261 Bibcode 2014AmJPh 82 257B doi 10 1119 1 4830043 hdl 10251 54288 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Baskin R J Roos K P Yeh Y October 1979 Light diffraction study of single skeletal muscle fibers Biophys J 28 1 45 64 Bibcode 1979BpJ 28 45B doi 10 1016 S0006 3495 79 85158 9 PMC 1328609 PMID 318066 a b Stavenga D G 2014 Thin Film and Multilayer Optics Cause Structural Colors of Many Insects and Birds Materials Today Proceedings 1 109 121 doi 10 1016 j matpr 2014 09 007 Roberts N W Marshall N J Cronin T W 2012 High levels of reflectivity and pointillist structural color in fish cephalopods and beetles Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 109 50 E3387 Bibcode 2012PNAS 109E3387R doi 10 1073 pnas 1216282109 PMC 3528518 PMID 23132935 Stavenga D G Leertouwer H L Wilts B D 2014 Coloration principles of nymphaline 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optical characteristics and production of diffraction gratings A quantitative explanation of their experimental qualities with a description of their manufacture and relative merits J Chem Educ 70 9 741 Bibcode 1993JChEd 70 741G doi 10 1021 ed070p741 Volume phase holography gratings National Optical Astronomy Observatories External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Diffraction gratings Diffraction Gratings Lecture 9 Youtube Diffraction Gratings The Crucial Dispersive Element Optics Tutorial Diffraction Gratings Ruled amp Holographic Ray Tracing program handling general reflective concave gratings for Windows XP and above Interference in Diffraction Grating Beams Wolfram demonstration Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Diffraction grating amp oldid 1151335531, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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