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Diffraction

Diffraction is the interference or bending of waves around the corners of an obstacle or through an aperture into the region of geometrical shadow of the obstacle/aperture. The diffracting object or aperture effectively becomes a secondary source of the propagating wave. Italian scientist Francesco Maria Grimaldi coined the word diffraction and was the first to record accurate observations of the phenomenon in 1660.[1][2]

A diffraction pattern of a red laser beam projected onto a plate after passing through a small circular aperture in another plate
Infinitely many points (three shown) along length project phase contributions from the wavefront, producing a continuously varying intensity on the registering plate

In classical physics, the diffraction phenomenon is described by the Huygens–Fresnel principle that treats each point in a propagating wavefront as a collection of individual spherical wavelets.[3] The characteristic bending pattern is most pronounced when a wave from a coherent source (such as a laser) encounters a slit/aperture that is comparable in size to its wavelength, as shown in the inserted image. This is due to the addition, or interference, of different points on the wavefront (or, equivalently, each wavelet) that travel by paths of different lengths to the registering surface. If there are multiple, closely spaced openings (e.g., a diffraction grating), a complex pattern of varying intensity can result.

These effects also occur when a light wave travels through a medium with a varying refractive index, or when a sound wave travels through a medium with varying acoustic impedance – all waves diffract,[4] including gravitational waves,[5] water waves, and other electromagnetic waves such as X-rays and radio waves. Furthermore, quantum mechanics also demonstrates that matter possesses wave-like properties and, therefore, undergoes diffraction (which is measurable at subatomic to molecular levels).[6]

The amount of diffraction depends on the size of the gap. Diffraction is greatest when the size of the gap is similar to the wavelength of the wave. In this case, when the waves pass through the gap they become semi-circular.

History edit

 
Thomas Young's sketch of two-slit diffraction for water waves, which he presented to the Royal Society in 1803

Da Vinci might have observed diffraction in a broadening of the shadow.[7] The effects of diffraction of light were first carefully observed and characterized by Francesco Maria Grimaldi, who also coined the term diffraction, from the Latin diffringere, 'to break into pieces', referring to light breaking up into different directions. The results of Grimaldi's observations were published posthumously in 1665.[8][9][10] Isaac Newton studied these effects and attributed them to inflexion of light rays. James Gregory (16381675) observed the diffraction patterns caused by a bird feather, which was effectively the first diffraction grating to be discovered.[11] Thomas Young performed a celebrated experiment in 1803 demonstrating interference from two closely spaced slits.[12] Explaining his results by interference of the waves emanating from the two different slits, he deduced that light must propagate as waves. Augustin-Jean Fresnel did more definitive studies and calculations of diffraction, made public in 1816[13] and 1818,[14] and thereby gave great support to the wave theory of light that had been advanced by Christiaan Huygens[15] and reinvigorated by Young, against Newton's corpuscular theory of light.

Mechanism edit

 
Single-slit diffraction in a circular ripple tank

In classical physics diffraction arises because of how waves propagate; this is described by the Huygens–Fresnel principle and the principle of superposition of waves. The propagation of a wave can be visualized by considering every particle of the transmitted medium on a wavefront as a point source for a secondary spherical wave. The wave displacement at any subsequent point is the sum of these secondary waves. When waves are added together, their sum is determined by the relative phases as well as the amplitudes of the individual waves so that the summed amplitude of the waves can have any value between zero and the sum of the individual amplitudes. Hence, diffraction patterns usually have a series of maxima and minima.

In the modern quantum mechanical understanding of light propagation through a slit (or slits) every photon is described by its wavefunction that determines the probability distribution for the photon: the light and dark bands are the areas where the photons are more or less likely to be detected. The wavefunction is determined by the physical surroundings such as slit geometry, screen distance, and initial conditions when the photon is created. The wave nature of individual photons (as opposed to wave properties only arising from the interactions between multitudes of photons) was implied by a low-intensity double-slit experiment first performed by G. I. Taylor in 1909. The quantum approach has some striking similarities to the Huygens-Fresnel principle; based on that principle, as light travels through slits and boundaries, secondary point light sources are created near or along these obstacles, and the resulting diffraction pattern is going to be the intensity profile based on the collective interference of all these light sources that have different optical paths. In the quantum formalism, that is similar to considering the limited regions around the slits and boundaries from which photons are more likely to originate, and calculating the probability distribution (that is proportional to the resulting intensity of classical formalism).

There are various analytical models which allow the diffracted field to be calculated, including the Kirchhoff diffraction equation (derived from the wave equation),[16] the Fraunhofer diffraction approximation of the Kirchhoff equation (applicable to the far field), the Fresnel diffraction approximation (applicable to the near field) and the Feynman path integral formulation. Most configurations cannot be solved analytically, but can yield numerical solutions through finite element and boundary element methods.

It is possible to obtain a qualitative understanding of many diffraction phenomena by considering how the relative phases of the individual secondary wave sources vary, and, in particular, the conditions in which the phase difference equals half a cycle in which case waves will cancel one another out.

The simplest descriptions of diffraction are those in which the situation can be reduced to a two-dimensional problem. For water waves, this is already the case; water waves propagate only on the surface of the water. For light, we can often neglect one direction if the diffracting object extends in that direction over a distance far greater than the wavelength. In the case of light shining through small circular holes, we will have to take into account the full three-dimensional nature of the problem.

Examples edit

The effects of diffraction are often seen in everyday life. The most striking examples of diffraction are those that involve light; for example, the closely spaced tracks on a CD or DVD act as a diffraction grating to form the familiar rainbow pattern seen when looking at a disc.

 
Pixels on smart phone screen acting as diffraction grating
 
Data is written on CDs as pits and lands; the pits on the surface act as diffracting elements.

This principle can be extended to engineer a grating with a structure such that it will produce any diffraction pattern desired; the hologram on a credit card is an example.

Diffraction in the atmosphere by small particles can cause a bright ring to be visible around a bright light source like the sun or the moon.

 
A solar glory on steam from hot springs. A glory is an optical phenomenon produced by light backscattered (a combination of diffraction, reflection and refraction) towards its source by a cloud of uniformly sized water droplets.

A shadow of a solid object, using light from a compact source, shows small fringes near its edges.

 
The bright spot (Arago spot) seen in the center of the shadow of a circular obstacle is due to diffraction

Diffraction spikes are diffraction patterns caused due to non-circular aperture in camera or support struts in telescope; In normal vision, diffraction through eyelashes may produce such spikes.

 
View from the end of Millennium Bridge; Moon rising above the Southwark Bridge. Street lights are reflecting in the Thames.
 
Simulated diffraction spikes in hexagonal telescope mirrors

The speckle pattern which is observed when laser light falls on an optically rough surface is also a diffraction phenomenon. When deli meat appears to be iridescent, that is diffraction off the meat fibers.[18] All these effects are a consequence of the fact that light propagates as a wave.

Diffraction can occur with any kind of wave. Ocean waves diffract around jetties and other obstacles.

 
Circular waves generated by diffraction from the narrow entrance of a flooded coastal quarry

Sound waves can diffract around objects, which is why one can still hear someone calling even when hiding behind a tree.[19]

Diffraction can also be a concern in some technical applications; it sets a fundamental limit to the resolution of a camera, telescope, or microscope.

Other examples of diffraction are considered below.

Single-slit diffraction edit

 
2D Single-slit diffraction with width changing animation
 
Numerical approximation of diffraction pattern from a slit of width four wavelengths with an incident plane wave. The main central beam, nulls, and phase reversals are apparent.
 
Graph and image of single-slit diffraction

A long slit of infinitesimal width which is illuminated by light diffracts the light into a series of circular waves and the wavefront which emerges from the slit is a cylindrical wave of uniform intensity, in accordance with the Huygens–Fresnel principle.

An illuminated slit that is wider than a wavelength produces interference effects in the space downstream of the slit. Assuming that the slit behaves as though it has a large number of point sources spaced evenly across the width of the slit interference effects can be calculated. The analysis of this system is simplified if we consider light of a single wavelength. If the incident light is coherent, these sources all have the same phase. Light incident at a given point in the space downstream of the slit is made up of contributions from each of these point sources and if the relative phases of these contributions vary by   or more, we may expect to find minima and maxima in the diffracted light. Such phase differences are caused by differences in the path lengths over which contributing rays reach the point from the slit.

We can find the angle at which a first minimum is obtained in the diffracted light by the following reasoning. The light from a source located at the top edge of the slit interferes destructively with a source located at the middle of the slit, when the path difference between them is equal to  . Similarly, the source just below the top of the slit will interfere destructively with the source located just below the middle of the slit at the same angle. We can continue this reasoning along the entire height of the slit to conclude that the condition for destructive interference for the entire slit is the same as the condition for destructive interference between two narrow slits a distance apart that is half the width of the slit. The path difference is approximately   so that the minimum intensity occurs at an angle   given by

 
where   is the width of the slit,   is the angle of incidence at which the minimum intensity occurs, and   is the wavelength of the light.

A similar argument can be used to show that if we imagine the slit to be divided into four, six, eight parts, etc., minima are obtained at angles   given by

 
where   is an integer other than zero.

There is no such simple argument to enable us to find the maxima of the diffraction pattern. The intensity profile can be calculated using the Fraunhofer diffraction equation as

 
where   is the intensity at a given angle,   is the intensity at the central maximum ( ), which is also a normalization factor of the intensity profile that can be determined by an integration from   to   and conservation of energy, and  , which is the unnormalized sinc function.

This analysis applies only to the far field (Fraunhofer diffraction), that is, at a distance much larger than the width of the slit.

From the intensity profile above, if  , the intensity will have little dependency on  , hence the wavefront emerging from the slit would resemble a cylindrical wave with azimuthal symmetry; If  , only   would have appreciable intensity, hence the wavefront emerging from the slit would resemble that of geometrical optics.

When the incident angle   of the light onto the slit is non-zero (which causes a change in the path length), the intensity profile in the Fraunhofer regime (i.e. far field) becomes:

 

The choice of plus/minus sign depends on the definition of the incident angle  .

 
2-slit (top) and 5-slit diffraction of red laser light
 
Diffraction of a red laser using a diffraction grating
 
A diffraction pattern of a 633 nm laser through a grid of 150 slits

Diffraction grating edit

Diffraction grating

A diffraction grating is an optical component with a regular pattern. The form of the light diffracted by a grating depends on the structure of the elements and the number of elements present, but all gratings have intensity maxima at angles θm which are given by the grating equation

 
where   is the angle at which the light is incident,   is the separation of grating elements, and   is an integer which can be positive or negative.

The light diffracted by a grating is found by summing the light diffracted from each of the elements, and is essentially a convolution of diffraction and interference patterns.

The figure shows the light diffracted by 2-element and 5-element gratings where the grating spacings are the same; it can be seen that the maxima are in the same position, but the detailed structures of the intensities are different.

 
A computer-generated image of an Airy disk
 
Computer-generated light diffraction pattern from a circular aperture of diameter 0.5 micrometre at a wavelength of 0.6 micrometre (red-light) at distances of 0.1 cm – 1 cm in steps of 0.1 cm. One can see the image moving from the Fresnel region into the Fraunhofer region where the Airy pattern is seen.

Circular aperture edit

The far-field diffraction of a plane wave incident on a circular aperture is often referred to as the Airy disk. The variation in intensity with angle is given by

 
where   is the radius of the circular aperture,   is equal to   and   is a Bessel function. The smaller the aperture, the larger the spot size at a given distance, and the greater the divergence of the diffracted beams.

General aperture edit

The wave that emerges from a point source has amplitude   at location   that is given by the solution of the frequency domain wave equation for a point source (the Helmholtz equation),

 
where   is the 3-dimensional delta function. The delta function has only radial dependence, so the Laplace operator (a.k.a. scalar Laplacian) in the spherical coordinate system simplifies to
 

(See del in cylindrical and spherical coordinates.) By direct substitution, the solution to this equation can be readily shown to be the scalar Green's function, which in the spherical coordinate system (and using the physics time convention  ) is

 

This solution assumes that the delta function source is located at the origin. If the source is located at an arbitrary source point, denoted by the vector   and the field point is located at the point  , then we may represent the scalar Green's function (for arbitrary source location) as

 

Therefore, if an electric field   is incident on the aperture, the field produced by this aperture distribution is given by the surface integral

 
 
On the calculation of Fraunhofer region fields

where the source point in the aperture is given by the vector

 

In the far field, wherein the parallel rays approximation can be employed, the Green's function,

 
simplifies to
 
as can be seen in the adjacent figure.

The expression for the far-zone (Fraunhofer region) field becomes

 

Now, since

 
and
 
the expression for the Fraunhofer region field from a planar aperture now becomes
 

Letting

 
and
 
the Fraunhofer region field of the planar aperture assumes the form of a Fourier transform
 

In the far-field / Fraunhofer region, this becomes the spatial Fourier transform of the aperture distribution. Huygens' principle when applied to an aperture simply says that the far-field diffraction pattern is the spatial Fourier transform of the aperture shape, and this is a direct by-product of using the parallel-rays approximation, which is identical to doing a plane wave decomposition of the aperture plane fields (see Fourier optics).

Propagation of a laser beam edit

The way in which the beam profile of a laser beam changes as it propagates is determined by diffraction. When the entire emitted beam has a planar, spatially coherent wave front, it approximates Gaussian beam profile and has the lowest divergence for a given diameter. The smaller the output beam, the quicker it diverges. It is possible to reduce the divergence of a laser beam by first expanding it with one convex lens, and then collimating it with a second convex lens whose focal point is coincident with that of the first lens. The resulting beam has a larger diameter, and hence a lower divergence. Divergence of a laser beam may be reduced below the diffraction of a Gaussian beam or even reversed to convergence if the refractive index of the propagation media increases with the light intensity.[20] This may result in a self-focusing effect.

When the wave front of the emitted beam has perturbations, only the transverse coherence length (where the wave front perturbation is less than 1/4 of the wavelength) should be considered as a Gaussian beam diameter when determining the divergence of the laser beam. If the transverse coherence length in the vertical direction is higher than in horizontal, the laser beam divergence will be lower in the vertical direction than in the horizontal.

Diffraction-limited imaging edit

 
The Airy disk around each of the stars from the 2.56 m telescope aperture can be seen in this lucky image of the binary star zeta Boötis.

The ability of an imaging system to resolve detail is ultimately limited by diffraction. This is because a plane wave incident on a circular lens or mirror is diffracted as described above. The light is not focused to a point but forms an Airy disk having a central spot in the focal plane whose radius (as measured to the first null) is

 
where   is the wavelength of the light and   is the f-number (focal length   divided by aperture diameter  ) of the imaging optics; this is strictly accurate for   (paraxial case). In object space, the corresponding angular resolution is
 
where   is the diameter of the entrance pupil of the imaging lens (e.g., of a telescope's main mirror).

Two point sources will each produce an Airy pattern – see the photo of a binary star. As the point sources move closer together, the patterns will start to overlap, and ultimately they will merge to form a single pattern, in which case the two point sources cannot be resolved in the image. The Rayleigh criterion specifies that two point sources are considered "resolved" if the separation of the two images is at least the radius of the Airy disk, i.e. if the first minimum of one coincides with the maximum of the other.

Thus, the larger the aperture of the lens compared to the wavelength, the finer the resolution of an imaging system. This is one reason astronomical telescopes require large objectives, and why microscope objectives require a large numerical aperture (large aperture diameter compared to working distance) in order to obtain the highest possible resolution.

Speckle patterns edit

The speckle pattern seen when using a laser pointer is another diffraction phenomenon. It is a result of the superposition of many waves with different phases, which are produced when a laser beam illuminates a rough surface. They add together to give a resultant wave whose amplitude, and therefore intensity, varies randomly.

Babinet's principle edit

Babinet's principle is a useful theorem stating that the diffraction pattern from an opaque body is identical to that from a hole of the same size and shape, but with differing intensities. This means that the interference conditions of a single obstruction would be the same as that of a single slit.

"Knife edge" edit

The knife-edge effect or knife-edge diffraction is a truncation of a portion of the incident radiation that strikes a sharp well-defined obstacle, such as a mountain range or the wall of a building. The knife-edge effect is explained by the Huygens–Fresnel principle, which states that a well-defined obstruction to an electromagnetic wave acts as a secondary source, and creates a new wavefront. This new wavefront propagates into the geometric shadow area of the obstacle.

Knife-edge diffraction is an outgrowth of the "half-plane problem", originally solved by Arnold Sommerfeld using a plane wave spectrum formulation. A generalization of the half-plane problem is the "wedge problem", solvable as a boundary value problem in cylindrical coordinates. The solution in cylindrical coordinates was then extended to the optical regime by Joseph B. Keller, who introduced the notion of diffraction coefficients through his geometrical theory of diffraction (GTD). Pathak and Kouyoumjian extended the (singular) Keller coefficients via the uniform theory of diffraction (UTD).

Patterns edit

 
The upper half of this image shows a diffraction pattern of He-Ne laser beam on an elliptic aperture. The lower half is its 2D Fourier transform approximately reconstructing the shape of the aperture.

Several qualitative observations can be made of diffraction in general:

  • The angular spacing of the features in the diffraction pattern is inversely proportional to the dimensions of the object causing the diffraction. In other words: The smaller the diffracting object, the 'wider' the resulting diffraction pattern, and vice versa. (More precisely, this is true of the sines of the angles.)
  • The diffraction angles are invariant under scaling; that is, they depend only on the ratio of the wavelength to the size of the diffracting object.
  • When the diffracting object has a periodic structure, for example in a diffraction grating, the features generally become sharper. The third figure, for example, shows a comparison of a double-slit pattern with a pattern formed by five slits, both sets of slits having the same spacing, between the center of one slit and the next.

Matter wave diffraction edit

According to quantum theory every particle exhibits wave properties and can therefore diffract. Diffraction of electrons and neutrons is one of the powerful arguments in favor of quantum mechanics. The wavelength associated with a particle is the de Broglie wavelength

 
where   is the Planck constant and   is the momentum of the particle (mass × velocity for slow-moving particles). For example, a sodium atom traveling at about 300 m/s would have a de Broglie wavelength of about 50 picometres.

Diffraction of matter waves has been observed for small particles, like electrons, neutrons, atoms, and even large molecules. The short wavelength of these matter waves makes them ideally suited to study the atomic crystal structure of solids, small molecules and proteins.

Bragg diffraction edit

 
Following Bragg's law, each dot (or reflection) in this diffraction pattern forms from the constructive interference of X-rays passing through a crystal. The data can be used to determine the crystal's atomic structure.

Diffraction from a large three-dimensional periodic structure such as many thousands of atoms in a crystal is called Bragg diffraction. It is similar to what occurs when waves are scattered from a diffraction grating. Bragg diffraction is a consequence of interference between waves reflecting from many different crystal planes. The condition of constructive interference is given by Bragg's law:

 
where   is the wavelength,   is the distance between crystal planes,   is the angle of the diffracted wave, and   is an integer known as the order of the diffracted beam.

Bragg diffraction may be carried out using either electromagnetic radiation of very short wavelength like X-rays or matter waves like neutrons (and electrons) whose wavelength is on the order of (or much smaller than) the atomic spacing.[21] The pattern produced gives information of the separations of crystallographic planes  , allowing one to deduce the crystal structure.

For completeness, Bragg diffraction is a limit for a large number of atoms with X-rays or neutrons, and is rarely valid for electron diffraction or with solid particles in the size range of less than 50 nanometers.[21]

Coherence edit

The description of diffraction relies on the interference of waves emanating from the same source taking different paths to the same point on a screen. In this description, the difference in phase between waves that took different paths is only dependent on the effective path length. This does not take into account the fact that waves that arrive at the screen at the same time were emitted by the source at different times. The initial phase with which the source emits waves can change over time in an unpredictable way. This means that waves emitted by the source at times that are too far apart can no longer form a constant interference pattern since the relation between their phases is no longer time independent.[22]: 919 

The length over which the phase in a beam of light is correlated is called the coherence length. In order for interference to occur, the path length difference must be smaller than the coherence length. This is sometimes referred to as spectral coherence, as it is related to the presence of different frequency components in the wave. In the case of light emitted by an atomic transition, the coherence length is related to the lifetime of the excited state from which the atom made its transition.[23]: 71–74 [24]: 314–316 

If waves are emitted from an extended source, this can lead to incoherence in the transversal direction. When looking at a cross section of a beam of light, the length over which the phase is correlated is called the transverse coherence length. In the case of Young's double-slit experiment, this would mean that if the transverse coherence length is smaller than the spacing between the two slits, the resulting pattern on a screen would look like two single-slit diffraction patterns.[23]: 74–79 

In the case of particles like electrons, neutrons, and atoms, the coherence length is related to the spatial extent of the wave function that describes the particle.[25]: 107 

Applications edit

Diffraction before destruction edit

A new way to image single biological particles has emerged since the 2010s, utilising the bright X-rays generated by X-ray free-electron lasers. These femtosecond-duration pulses will allow for the (potential) imaging of single biological macromolecules. Due to these short pulses, radiation damage can be outrun, and diffraction patterns of single biological macromolecules will be able to be obtained.[26][27]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Francesco Maria Grimaldi, Physico mathesis de lumine, coloribus, et iride, aliisque annexis libri duo (Bologna ("Bonomia"), Italy: Vittorio Bonati, 1665), page 2 2016-12-01 at the Wayback Machine:

    Original : Nobis alius quartus modus illuxit, quem nunc proponimus, vocamusque; diffractionem, quia advertimus lumen aliquando diffringi, hoc est partes eius multiplici dissectione separatas per idem tamen medium in diversa ulterius procedere, eo modo, quem mox declarabimus.

    Translation : It has illuminated for us another, fourth way, which we now make known and call "diffraction" [i.e., shattering], because we sometimes observe light break up; that is, that parts of the compound [i.e., the beam of light], separated by division, advance farther through the medium but in different [directions], as we will soon show.

  2. ^ Cajori, Florian "A History of Physics in its Elementary Branches, including the evolution of physical laboratories." 2016-12-01 at the Wayback Machine MacMillan Company, New York 1899
  3. ^ Wireless Communications: Principles and Practice, Prentice Hall communications engineering and emerging technologies series, T. S. Rappaport, Prentice Hall, 2002 pg 126
  4. ^ Suryanarayana, C.; Norton, M. Grant (29 June 2013). X-Ray Diffraction: A Practical Approach. Springer Science & Business Media. p. 14. ISBN 978-1-4899-0148-4. Retrieved 7 January 2023.
  5. ^ Kokkotas, Kostas D. (2003). "Gravitational Wave Physics". Encyclopedia of Physical Science and Technology: 67–85. doi:10.1016/B0-12-227410-5/00300-8. ISBN 9780122274107.
  6. ^ Juffmann, Thomas; Milic, Adriana; Müllneritsch, Michael; Asenbaum, Peter; Tsukernik, Alexander; Tüxen, Jens; Mayor, Marcel; Cheshnovsky, Ori; Arndt, Markus (25 March 2012). "Real-time single-molecule imaging of quantum interference". Nature Nanotechnology. 7 (5): 297–300. arXiv:1402.1867. Bibcode:2012NatNa...7..297J. doi:10.1038/nnano.2012.34. ISSN 1748-3395. PMID 22447163. S2CID 5918772.
  7. ^ Komech, Alexander; Merzon, Anatoli (2019), Komech, Alexander; Merzon, Anatoli (eds.), "The Early Theory of Diffraction", Stationary Diffraction by Wedges : Method of Automorphic Functions on Complex Characteristics, Cham: Springer International Publishing, pp. 15–17, doi:10.1007/978-3-030-26699-8_2, ISBN 978-3-030-26699-8, retrieved 25 April 2024
  8. ^ Francesco Maria Grimaldi, Physico-mathesis de lumine, coloribus, et iride, aliisque adnexis … [The physical mathematics of light, color, and the rainbow, and other things appended …] (Bologna ("Bonomia"), (Italy): Vittorio Bonati, 1665), pp. 1–11 2016-12-01 at the Wayback Machine: "Propositio I. Lumen propagatur seu diffunditur non solum directe, refracte, ac reflexe, sed etiam alio quodam quarto modo, diffracte." (Proposition 1. Light propagates or spreads not only in a straight line, by refraction, and by reflection, but also by a somewhat different fourth way: by diffraction.) On p. 187, Grimaldi also discusses the interference of light from two sources: "Propositio XXII. Lumen aliquando per sui communicationem reddit obscuriorem superficiem corporis aliunde, ac prius illustratam." (Proposition 22. Sometimes light, as a result of its transmission, renders dark a body's surface, [which had been] previously illuminated by another [source].)
  9. ^ Jean Louis Aubert (1760). Memoires pour l'histoire des sciences et des beaux arts. Paris: Impr. de S. A. S.; Chez E. Ganeau. pp. 149. grimaldi diffraction 0–1800.
  10. ^ Sir David Brewster (1831). A Treatise on Optics. London: Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown & Green and John Taylor. pp. 95.
  11. ^ Letter from James Gregory to John Collins, dated 13 May 1673. Reprinted in: Correspondence of Scientific Men of the Seventeenth Century …, ed. Stephen Jordan Rigaud (Oxford, England: Oxford University Press, 1841), vol. 2, pp. 251–255, especially p. 254 2016-12-01 at the Wayback Machine.
  12. ^ 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.)
  13. ^ 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.)
  14. ^ 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.)
  15. ^ Christiaan Huygens, Traité de la lumiere … 2016-06-16 at the Wayback Machine (Leiden, Netherlands: Pieter van der Aa, 1690), Chapter 1. From p. 15 2016-12-01 at the Wayback Machine: "J'ay donc monstré de quelle façon l'on peut concevoir que la lumiere s'etend successivement par des ondes spheriques, … " (I have thus shown in what manner one can imagine that light propagates successively by spherical waves, … ) (Note: Huygens published his Traité in 1690; however, in the preface to his book, Huygens states that in 1678 he first communicated his book to the French Royal Academy of Sciences.)
  16. ^ Baker, B.B. & Copson, E.T. (1939), The Mathematical Theory of Huygens' Principle, Oxford, pp. 36–40.
  17. ^ Dietrich Zawischa. "Optical effects on spider webs". Retrieved 21 September 2007.
  18. ^ Arumugam, Nadia (9 September 2013). "Food Explainer: Why Is Some Deli Meat Iridescent?". Slate. The Slate Group. from the original on 10 September 2013. Retrieved 9 September 2013.
  19. ^ Andrew Norton (2000). Dynamic fields and waves of physics. CRC Press. p. 102. ISBN 978-0-7503-0719-2.
  20. ^ Chiao, R. Y.; Garmire, E.; Townes, C. H. (1964). "Self-Trapping of Optical Beams". Physical Review Letters. 13 (15): 479–482. Bibcode:1964PhRvL..13..479C. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.13.479.
  21. ^ a b John M. Cowley (1975) Diffraction physics (North-Holland, Amsterdam) ISBN 0-444-10791-6
  22. ^ Halliday, David; Resnick, Robert; Walker, Jerl (2005), Fundamental of Physics (7th ed.), USA: John Wiley and Sons, Inc., ISBN 978-0-471-23231-5
  23. ^ a b Grant R. Fowles (1975). Introduction to Modern Optics. Courier Corporation. ISBN 978-0-486-65957-2.
  24. ^ Hecht, Eugene (2002). Optics (4th ed.). United States of America: Addison Wesley. ISBN 978-0-8053-8566-3.
  25. ^ Ayahiko Ichimiya; Philip I. Cohen (13 December 2004). Reflection High-Energy Electron Diffraction. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-45373-8. from the original on 16 July 2017.
  26. ^ Neutze, Richard; Wouts, Remco; van der Spoel, David; Weckert, Edgar; Hajdu, Janos (August 2000). "Potential for biomolecular imaging with femtosecond X-ray pulses". Nature. 406 (6797): 752–757. Bibcode:2000Natur.406..752N. doi:10.1038/35021099. ISSN 1476-4687. PMID 10963603. S2CID 4300920.
  27. ^ Chapman, Henry N.; Caleman, Carl; Timneanu, Nicusor (17 July 2014). "Diffraction before destruction". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 369 (1647): 20130313. doi:10.1098/rstb.2013.0313. PMC 4052855. PMID 24914146.

External links edit

  • The Feynman Lectures on Physics Vol. I Ch. 30: Diffraction
  • "Scattering and diffraction". Crystallography. International Union of Crystallography.
  • Using a cd as a diffraction grating at YouTube

diffraction, confused, with, refraction, change, direction, wave, passing, from, medium, another, interference, bending, waves, around, corners, obstacle, through, aperture, into, region, geometrical, shadow, obstacle, aperture, diffracting, object, aperture, . Not to be confused with refraction the change in direction of a wave passing from one medium to another Diffraction is the interference or bending of waves around the corners of an obstacle or through an aperture into the region of geometrical shadow of the obstacle aperture The diffracting object or aperture effectively becomes a secondary source of the propagating wave Italian scientist Francesco Maria Grimaldi coined the word diffraction and was the first to record accurate observations of the phenomenon in 1660 1 2 A diffraction pattern of a red laser beam projected onto a plate after passing through a small circular aperture in another plate Infinitely many points three shown along length d displaystyle d project phase contributions from the wavefront producing a continuously varying intensity 8 displaystyle theta on the registering plate In classical physics the diffraction phenomenon is described by the Huygens Fresnel principle that treats each point in a propagating wavefront as a collection of individual spherical wavelets 3 The characteristic bending pattern is most pronounced when a wave from a coherent source such as a laser encounters a slit aperture that is comparable in size to its wavelength as shown in the inserted image This is due to the addition or interference of different points on the wavefront or equivalently each wavelet that travel by paths of different lengths to the registering surface If there are multiple closely spaced openings e g a diffraction grating a complex pattern of varying intensity can result These effects also occur when a light wave travels through a medium with a varying refractive index or when a sound wave travels through a medium with varying acoustic impedance all waves diffract 4 including gravitational waves 5 water waves and other electromagnetic waves such as X rays and radio waves Furthermore quantum mechanics also demonstrates that matter possesses wave like properties and therefore undergoes diffraction which is measurable at subatomic to molecular levels 6 The amount of diffraction depends on the size of the gap Diffraction is greatest when the size of the gap is similar to the wavelength of the wave In this case when the waves pass through the gap they become semi circular Contents 1 History 2 Mechanism 3 Examples 3 1 Single slit diffraction 3 2 Diffraction grating 3 3 Circular aperture 3 4 General aperture 3 5 Propagation of a laser beam 3 6 Diffraction limited imaging 3 7 Speckle patterns 3 8 Babinet s principle 3 9 Knife edge 4 Patterns 5 Matter wave diffraction 6 Bragg diffraction 7 Coherence 8 Applications 8 1 Diffraction before destruction 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksHistory edit nbsp Thomas Young s sketch of two slit diffraction for water waves which he presented to the Royal Society in 1803 Da Vinci might have observed diffraction in a broadening of the shadow 7 The effects of diffraction of light were first carefully observed and characterized by Francesco Maria Grimaldi who also coined the term diffraction from the Latin diffringere to break into pieces referring to light breaking up into different directions The results of Grimaldi s observations were published posthumously in 1665 8 9 10 Isaac Newton studied these effects and attributed them to inflexion of light rays James Gregory 1638 1675 observed the diffraction patterns caused by a bird feather which was effectively the first diffraction grating to be discovered 11 Thomas Young performed a celebrated experiment in 1803 demonstrating interference from two closely spaced slits 12 Explaining his results by interference of the waves emanating from the two different slits he deduced that light must propagate as waves Augustin Jean Fresnel did more definitive studies and calculations of diffraction made public in 1816 13 and 1818 14 and thereby gave great support to the wave theory of light that had been advanced by Christiaan Huygens 15 and reinvigorated by Young against Newton s corpuscular theory of light Mechanism edit nbsp Single slit diffraction in a circular ripple tank In classical physics diffraction arises because of how waves propagate this is described by the Huygens Fresnel principle and the principle of superposition of waves The propagation of a wave can be visualized by considering every particle of the transmitted medium on a wavefront as a point source for a secondary spherical wave The wave displacement at any subsequent point is the sum of these secondary waves When waves are added together their sum is determined by the relative phases as well as the amplitudes of the individual waves so that the summed amplitude of the waves can have any value between zero and the sum of the individual amplitudes Hence diffraction patterns usually have a series of maxima and minima In the modern quantum mechanical understanding of light propagation through a slit or slits every photon is described by its wavefunction that determines the probability distribution for the photon the light and dark bands are the areas where the photons are more or less likely to be detected The wavefunction is determined by the physical surroundings such as slit geometry screen distance and initial conditions when the photon is created The wave nature of individual photons as opposed to wave properties only arising from the interactions between multitudes of photons was implied by a low intensity double slit experiment first performed by G I Taylor in 1909 The quantum approach has some striking similarities to the Huygens Fresnel principle based on that principle as light travels through slits and boundaries secondary point light sources are created near or along these obstacles and the resulting diffraction pattern is going to be the intensity profile based on the collective interference of all these light sources that have different optical paths In the quantum formalism that is similar to considering the limited regions around the slits and boundaries from which photons are more likely to originate and calculating the probability distribution that is proportional to the resulting intensity of classical formalism There are various analytical models which allow the diffracted field to be calculated including the Kirchhoff diffraction equation derived from the wave equation 16 the Fraunhofer diffraction approximation of the Kirchhoff equation applicable to the far field the Fresnel diffraction approximation applicable to the near field and the Feynman path integral formulation Most configurations cannot be solved analytically but can yield numerical solutions through finite element and boundary element methods It is possible to obtain a qualitative understanding of many diffraction phenomena by considering how the relative phases of the individual secondary wave sources vary and in particular the conditions in which the phase difference equals half a cycle in which case waves will cancel one another out The simplest descriptions of diffraction are those in which the situation can be reduced to a two dimensional problem For water waves this is already the case water waves propagate only on the surface of the water For light we can often neglect one direction if the diffracting object extends in that direction over a distance far greater than the wavelength In the case of light shining through small circular holes we will have to take into account the full three dimensional nature of the problem nbsp Computer generated intensity pattern formed on a screen by diffraction from a square aperture nbsp Generation of an interference pattern from two slit diffraction nbsp Computational model of an interference pattern from two slit diffraction nbsp Optical diffraction pattern laser analogous to X ray diffraction nbsp Colors seen in a spider web are partially due to diffraction according to some analyses 17 Examples editThe effects of diffraction are often seen in everyday life The most striking examples of diffraction are those that involve light for example the closely spaced tracks on a CD or DVD act as a diffraction grating to form the familiar rainbow pattern seen when looking at a disc nbsp Pixels on smart phone screen acting as diffraction grating nbsp Data is written on CDs as pits and lands the pits on the surface act as diffracting elements This principle can be extended to engineer a grating with a structure such that it will produce any diffraction pattern desired the hologram on a credit card is an example Diffraction in the atmosphere by small particles can cause a bright ring to be visible around a bright light source like the sun or the moon nbsp A solar glory on steam from hot springs A glory is an optical phenomenon produced by light backscattered a combination of diffraction reflection and refraction towards its source by a cloud of uniformly sized water droplets A shadow of a solid object using light from a compact source shows small fringes near its edges nbsp The bright spot Arago spot seen in the center of the shadow of a circular obstacle is due to diffraction Diffraction spikes are diffraction patterns caused due to non circular aperture in camera or support struts in telescope In normal vision diffraction through eyelashes may produce such spikes nbsp View from the end of Millennium Bridge Moon rising above the Southwark Bridge Street lights are reflecting in the Thames nbsp Simulated diffraction spikes in hexagonal telescope mirrors The speckle pattern which is observed when laser light falls on an optically rough surface is also a diffraction phenomenon When deli meat appears to be iridescent that is diffraction off the meat fibers 18 All these effects are a consequence of the fact that light propagates as a wave Diffraction can occur with any kind of wave Ocean waves diffract around jetties and other obstacles nbsp Circular waves generated by diffraction from the narrow entrance of a flooded coastal quarrySound waves can diffract around objects which is why one can still hear someone calling even when hiding behind a tree 19 Diffraction can also be a concern in some technical applications it sets a fundamental limit to the resolution of a camera telescope or microscope Other examples of diffraction are considered below Single slit diffraction edit Main article Diffraction formalism nbsp 2D Single slit diffraction with width changing animation nbsp Numerical approximation of diffraction pattern from a slit of width four wavelengths with an incident plane wave The main central beam nulls and phase reversals are apparent nbsp Graph and image of single slit diffraction A long slit of infinitesimal width which is illuminated by light diffracts the light into a series of circular waves and the wavefront which emerges from the slit is a cylindrical wave of uniform intensity in accordance with the Huygens Fresnel principle An illuminated slit that is wider than a wavelength produces interference effects in the space downstream of the slit Assuming that the slit behaves as though it has a large number of point sources spaced evenly across the width of the slit interference effects can be calculated The analysis of this system is simplified if we consider light of a single wavelength If the incident light is coherent these sources all have the same phase Light incident at a given point in the space downstream of the slit is made up of contributions from each of these point sources and if the relative phases of these contributions vary by 2 p displaystyle 2 pi nbsp or more we may expect to find minima and maxima in the diffracted light Such phase differences are caused by differences in the path lengths over which contributing rays reach the point from the slit We can find the angle at which a first minimum is obtained in the diffracted light by the following reasoning The light from a source located at the top edge of the slit interferes destructively with a source located at the middle of the slit when the path difference between them is equal to l 2 displaystyle lambda 2 nbsp Similarly the source just below the top of the slit will interfere destructively with the source located just below the middle of the slit at the same angle We can continue this reasoning along the entire height of the slit to conclude that the condition for destructive interference for the entire slit is the same as the condition for destructive interference between two narrow slits a distance apart that is half the width of the slit The path difference is approximately d sin 8 2 displaystyle frac d sin theta 2 nbsp so that the minimum intensity occurs at an angle 8 min displaystyle theta text min nbsp given byd sin 8 min l displaystyle d sin theta text min lambda nbsp where d displaystyle d nbsp is the width of the slit 8 min displaystyle theta text min nbsp is the angle of incidence at which the minimum intensity occurs and l displaystyle lambda nbsp is the wavelength of the light A similar argument can be used to show that if we imagine the slit to be divided into four six eight parts etc minima are obtained at angles 8 n displaystyle theta n nbsp given byd sin 8 n n l displaystyle d sin theta n n lambda nbsp where n displaystyle n nbsp is an integer other than zero There is no such simple argument to enable us to find the maxima of the diffraction pattern The intensity profile can be calculated using the Fraunhofer diffraction equation asI 8 I 0 sinc 2 d p l sin 8 displaystyle I theta I 0 operatorname sinc 2 left frac d pi lambda sin theta right nbsp where I 8 displaystyle I theta nbsp is the intensity at a given angle I 0 displaystyle I 0 nbsp is the intensity at the central maximum 8 0 displaystyle theta 0 nbsp which is also a normalization factor of the intensity profile that can be determined by an integration from 8 p 2 textstyle theta frac pi 2 nbsp to 8 p 2 textstyle theta frac pi 2 nbsp and conservation of energy and sinc x sin x x displaystyle operatorname sinc x frac sin x x nbsp which is the unnormalized sinc function This analysis applies only to the far field Fraunhofer diffraction that is at a distance much larger than the width of the slit From the intensity profile above if d l displaystyle d ll lambda nbsp the intensity will have little dependency on 8 displaystyle theta nbsp hence the wavefront emerging from the slit would resemble a cylindrical wave with azimuthal symmetry If d l displaystyle d gg lambda nbsp only 8 0 displaystyle theta approx 0 nbsp would have appreciable intensity hence the wavefront emerging from the slit would resemble that of geometrical optics When the incident angle 8 i displaystyle theta text i nbsp of the light onto the slit is non zero which causes a change in the path length the intensity profile in the Fraunhofer regime i e far field becomes I 8 I 0 sinc 2 d p l sin 8 sin 8 i displaystyle I theta I 0 operatorname sinc 2 left frac d pi lambda sin theta pm sin theta text i right nbsp The choice of plus minus sign depends on the definition of the incident angle 8 i displaystyle theta text i nbsp nbsp 2 slit top and 5 slit diffraction of red laser light nbsp Diffraction of a red laser using a diffraction grating nbsp A diffraction pattern of a 633 nm laser through a grid of 150 slits Diffraction grating edit Main article Diffraction grating source source source source source source source source Diffraction grating A diffraction grating is an optical component with a regular pattern The form of the light diffracted by a grating depends on the structure of the elements and the number of elements present but all gratings have intensity maxima at angles 8m which are given by the grating equationd sin 8 m sin 8 i m l displaystyle d left sin theta m pm sin theta i right m lambda nbsp where 8 i displaystyle theta i nbsp is the angle at which the light is incident d displaystyle d nbsp is the separation of grating elements and m displaystyle m nbsp is an integer which can be positive or negative The light diffracted by a grating is found by summing the light diffracted from each of the elements and is essentially a convolution of diffraction and interference patterns The figure shows the light diffracted by 2 element and 5 element gratings where the grating spacings are the same it can be seen that the maxima are in the same position but the detailed structures of the intensities are different nbsp A computer generated image of an Airy disk nbsp Computer generated light diffraction pattern from a circular aperture of diameter 0 5 micrometre at a wavelength of 0 6 micrometre red light at distances of 0 1 cm 1 cm in steps of 0 1 cm One can see the image moving from the Fresnel region into the Fraunhofer region where the Airy pattern is seen Circular aperture edit Main article Airy disk The far field diffraction of a plane wave incident on a circular aperture is often referred to as the Airy disk The variation in intensity with angle is given byI 8 I 0 2 J 1 k a sin 8 k a sin 8 2 displaystyle I theta I 0 left frac 2J 1 ka sin theta ka sin theta right 2 nbsp where a displaystyle a nbsp is the radius of the circular aperture k displaystyle k nbsp is equal to 2 p l displaystyle 2 pi lambda nbsp and J 1 displaystyle J 1 nbsp is a Bessel function The smaller the aperture the larger the spot size at a given distance and the greater the divergence of the diffracted beams General aperture edit The wave that emerges from a point source has amplitude ps displaystyle psi nbsp at location r displaystyle mathbf r nbsp that is given by the solution of the frequency domain wave equation for a point source the Helmholtz equation 2 ps k 2 ps d r displaystyle nabla 2 psi k 2 psi delta mathbf r nbsp where d r displaystyle delta mathbf r nbsp is the 3 dimensional delta function The delta function has only radial dependence so the Laplace operator a k a scalar Laplacian in the spherical coordinate system simplifies to 2 ps 1 r 2 r 2 r ps displaystyle nabla 2 psi frac 1 r frac partial 2 partial r 2 r psi nbsp See del in cylindrical and spherical coordinates By direct substitution the solution to this equation can be readily shown to be the scalar Green s function which in the spherical coordinate system and using the physics time convention e i w t displaystyle e i omega t nbsp isps r e i k r 4 p r displaystyle psi r frac e ikr 4 pi r nbsp This solution assumes that the delta function source is located at the origin If the source is located at an arbitrary source point denoted by the vector r displaystyle mathbf r nbsp and the field point is located at the point r displaystyle mathbf r nbsp then we may represent the scalar Green s function for arbitrary source location asps r r e i k r r 4 p r r displaystyle psi mathbf r mathbf r frac e ik mathbf r mathbf r 4 pi mathbf r mathbf r nbsp Therefore if an electric field E i n c x y displaystyle E mathrm inc x y nbsp is incident on the aperture the field produced by this aperture distribution is given by the surface integralPS r a p e r t u r e E i n c x y e i k r r 4 p r r d x d y displaystyle Psi r propto iint limits mathrm aperture E mathrm inc x y frac e ik mathbf r mathbf r 4 pi mathbf r mathbf r dx dy nbsp nbsp On the calculation of Fraunhofer region fields where the source point in the aperture is given by the vectorr x x y y displaystyle mathbf r x mathbf hat x y mathbf hat y nbsp In the far field wherein the parallel rays approximation can be employed the Green s function ps r r e i k r r 4 p r r displaystyle psi mathbf r mathbf r frac e ik mathbf r mathbf r 4 pi mathbf r mathbf r nbsp simplifies to ps r r e i k r 4 p r e i k r r displaystyle psi mathbf r mathbf r frac e ikr 4 pi r e ik mathbf r cdot mathbf hat r nbsp as can be seen in the adjacent figure The expression for the far zone Fraunhofer region field becomesPS r e i k r 4 p r a p e r t u r e E i n c x y e i k r r d x d y displaystyle Psi r propto frac e ikr 4 pi r iint limits mathrm aperture E mathrm inc x y e ik mathbf r cdot mathbf hat r dx dy nbsp Now sincer x x y y displaystyle mathbf r x mathbf hat x y mathbf hat y nbsp and r sin 8 cos ϕ x sin 8 sin ϕ y cos 8 z displaystyle mathbf hat r sin theta cos phi mathbf hat x sin theta sin phi mathbf hat y cos theta mathbf hat z nbsp the expression for the Fraunhofer region field from a planar aperture now becomes PS r e i k r 4 p r a p e r t u r e E i n c x y e i k sin 8 cos ϕ x sin ϕ y d x d y displaystyle Psi r propto frac e ikr 4 pi r iint limits mathrm aperture E mathrm inc x y e ik sin theta cos phi x sin phi y dx dy nbsp Lettingk x k sin 8 cos ϕ displaystyle k x k sin theta cos phi nbsp and k y k sin 8 sin ϕ displaystyle k y k sin theta sin phi nbsp the Fraunhofer region field of the planar aperture assumes the form of a Fourier transform PS r e i k r 4 p r a p e r t u r e E i n c x y e i k x x k y y d x d y displaystyle Psi r propto frac e ikr 4 pi r iint limits mathrm aperture E mathrm inc x y e i k x x k y y dx dy nbsp In the far field Fraunhofer region this becomes the spatial Fourier transform of the aperture distribution Huygens principle when applied to an aperture simply says that the far field diffraction pattern is the spatial Fourier transform of the aperture shape and this is a direct by product of using the parallel rays approximation which is identical to doing a plane wave decomposition of the aperture plane fields see Fourier optics Propagation of a laser beam edit The way in which the beam profile of a laser beam changes as it propagates is determined by diffraction When the entire emitted beam has a planar spatially coherent wave front it approximates Gaussian beam profile and has the lowest divergence for a given diameter The smaller the output beam the quicker it diverges It is possible to reduce the divergence of a laser beam by first expanding it with one convex lens and then collimating it with a second convex lens whose focal point is coincident with that of the first lens The resulting beam has a larger diameter and hence a lower divergence Divergence of a laser beam may be reduced below the diffraction of a Gaussian beam or even reversed to convergence if the refractive index of the propagation media increases with the light intensity 20 This may result in a self focusing effect When the wave front of the emitted beam has perturbations only the transverse coherence length where the wave front perturbation is less than 1 4 of the wavelength should be considered as a Gaussian beam diameter when determining the divergence of the laser beam If the transverse coherence length in the vertical direction is higher than in horizontal the laser beam divergence will be lower in the vertical direction than in the horizontal Diffraction limited imaging edit Main article Diffraction limited system nbsp The Airy disk around each of the stars from the 2 56 m telescope aperture can be seen in this lucky image of the binary star zeta Bootis The ability of an imaging system to resolve detail is ultimately limited by diffraction This is because a plane wave incident on a circular lens or mirror is diffracted as described above The light is not focused to a point but forms an Airy disk having a central spot in the focal plane whose radius as measured to the first null isD x 1 22 l N displaystyle Delta x 1 22 lambda N nbsp where l displaystyle lambda nbsp is the wavelength of the light and N displaystyle N nbsp is the f number focal length f displaystyle f nbsp divided by aperture diameter D displaystyle D nbsp of the imaging optics this is strictly accurate for N 1 displaystyle N gg 1 nbsp paraxial case In object space the corresponding angular resolution is 8 sin 8 1 22 l D displaystyle theta approx sin theta 1 22 frac lambda D nbsp where D displaystyle D nbsp is the diameter of the entrance pupil of the imaging lens e g of a telescope s main mirror Two point sources will each produce an Airy pattern see the photo of a binary star As the point sources move closer together the patterns will start to overlap and ultimately they will merge to form a single pattern in which case the two point sources cannot be resolved in the image The Rayleigh criterion specifies that two point sources are considered resolved if the separation of the two images is at least the radius of the Airy disk i e if the first minimum of one coincides with the maximum of the other Thus the larger the aperture of the lens compared to the wavelength the finer the resolution of an imaging system This is one reason astronomical telescopes require large objectives and why microscope objectives require a large numerical aperture large aperture diameter compared to working distance in order to obtain the highest possible resolution Speckle patterns edit Main article Speckle pattern The speckle pattern seen when using a laser pointer is another diffraction phenomenon It is a result of the superposition of many waves with different phases which are produced when a laser beam illuminates a rough surface They add together to give a resultant wave whose amplitude and therefore intensity varies randomly Babinet s principle edit Main article Babinet s principle Babinet s principle is a useful theorem stating that the diffraction pattern from an opaque body is identical to that from a hole of the same size and shape but with differing intensities This means that the interference conditions of a single obstruction would be the same as that of a single slit Knife edge edit The knife edge effect or knife edge diffraction is a truncation of a portion of the incident radiation that strikes a sharp well defined obstacle such as a mountain range or the wall of a building The knife edge effect is explained by the Huygens Fresnel principle which states that a well defined obstruction to an electromagnetic wave acts as a secondary source and creates a new wavefront This new wavefront propagates into the geometric shadow area of the obstacle Knife edge diffraction is an outgrowth of the half plane problem originally solved by Arnold Sommerfeld using a plane wave spectrum formulation A generalization of the half plane problem is the wedge problem solvable as a boundary value problem in cylindrical coordinates The solution in cylindrical coordinates was then extended to the optical regime by Joseph B Keller who introduced the notion of diffraction coefficients through his geometrical theory of diffraction GTD Pathak and Kouyoumjian extended the singular Keller coefficients via the uniform theory of diffraction UTD nbsp Diffraction on a sharp metallic edge nbsp Diffraction on a soft aperture with a gradient of conductivity over the image widthPatterns edit nbsp The upper half of this image shows a diffraction pattern of He Ne laser beam on an elliptic aperture The lower half is its 2D Fourier transform approximately reconstructing the shape of the aperture Several qualitative observations can be made of diffraction in general The angular spacing of the features in the diffraction pattern is inversely proportional to the dimensions of the object causing the diffraction In other words The smaller the diffracting object the wider the resulting diffraction pattern and vice versa More precisely this is true of the sines of the angles The diffraction angles are invariant under scaling that is they depend only on the ratio of the wavelength to the size of the diffracting object When the diffracting object has a periodic structure for example in a diffraction grating the features generally become sharper The third figure for example shows a comparison of a double slit pattern with a pattern formed by five slits both sets of slits having the same spacing between the center of one slit and the next Matter wave diffraction editSee also Matter wave Neutron diffraction and Electron diffraction According to quantum theory every particle exhibits wave properties and can therefore diffract Diffraction of electrons and neutrons is one of the powerful arguments in favor of quantum mechanics The wavelength associated with a particle is the de Broglie wavelengthl h p displaystyle lambda frac h p nbsp where h displaystyle h nbsp is the Planck constant and p displaystyle p nbsp is the momentum of the particle mass velocity for slow moving particles For example a sodium atom traveling at about 300 m s would have a de Broglie wavelength of about 50 picometres Diffraction of matter waves has been observed for small particles like electrons neutrons atoms and even large molecules The short wavelength of these matter waves makes them ideally suited to study the atomic crystal structure of solids small molecules and proteins Bragg diffraction editFurther information Bragg diffraction nbsp Following Bragg s law each dot or reflection in this diffraction pattern forms from the constructive interference of X rays passing through a crystal The data can be used to determine the crystal s atomic structure Diffraction from a large three dimensional periodic structure such as many thousands of atoms in a crystal is called Bragg diffraction It is similar to what occurs when waves are scattered from a diffraction grating Bragg diffraction is a consequence of interference between waves reflecting from many different crystal planes The condition of constructive interference is given by Bragg s law m l 2 d sin 8 displaystyle m lambda 2d sin theta nbsp where l displaystyle lambda nbsp is the wavelength d displaystyle d nbsp is the distance between crystal planes 8 displaystyle theta nbsp is the angle of the diffracted wave and m displaystyle m nbsp is an integer known as the order of the diffracted beam Bragg diffraction may be carried out using either electromagnetic radiation of very short wavelength like X rays or matter waves like neutrons and electrons whose wavelength is on the order of or much smaller than the atomic spacing 21 The pattern produced gives information of the separations of crystallographic planes d displaystyle d nbsp allowing one to deduce the crystal structure For completeness Bragg diffraction is a limit for a large number of atoms with X rays or neutrons and is rarely valid for electron diffraction or with solid particles in the size range of less than 50 nanometers 21 Coherence editMain article Coherence physics The description of diffraction relies on the interference of waves emanating from the same source taking different paths to the same point on a screen In this description the difference in phase between waves that took different paths is only dependent on the effective path length This does not take into account the fact that waves that arrive at the screen at the same time were emitted by the source at different times The initial phase with which the source emits waves can change over time in an unpredictable way This means that waves emitted by the source at times that are too far apart can no longer form a constant interference pattern since the relation between their phases is no longer time independent 22 919 The length over which the phase in a beam of light is correlated is called the coherence length In order for interference to occur the path length difference must be smaller than the coherence length This is sometimes referred to as spectral coherence as it is related to the presence of different frequency components in the wave In the case of light emitted by an atomic transition the coherence length is related to the lifetime of the excited state from which the atom made its transition 23 71 74 24 314 316 If waves are emitted from an extended source this can lead to incoherence in the transversal direction When looking at a cross section of a beam of light the length over which the phase is correlated is called the transverse coherence length In the case of Young s double slit experiment this would mean that if the transverse coherence length is smaller than the spacing between the two slits the resulting pattern on a screen would look like two single slit diffraction patterns 23 74 79 In the case of particles like electrons neutrons and atoms the coherence length is related to the spatial extent of the wave function that describes the particle 25 107 Applications editDiffraction before destruction edit A new way to image single biological particles has emerged since the 2010s utilising the bright X rays generated by X ray free electron lasers These femtosecond duration pulses will allow for the potential imaging of single biological macromolecules Due to these short pulses radiation damage can be outrun and diffraction patterns of single biological macromolecules will be able to be obtained 26 27 See also editAngle sensitive pixel Atmospheric diffraction Brocken spectre Cloud iridescence Coherent diffraction imaging Diffraction from slits Diffraction spike Diffraction vs interference Diffractive solar sail Diffractometer Dynamical theory of diffraction Electron diffraction Fraunhofer diffraction Fresnel imager Fresnel number Fresnel zone Point spread function Powder diffraction Quasioptics Refraction Reflection Schaefer Bergmann diffraction Thinned array curse X ray scattering techniquesReferences edit Francesco Maria Grimaldi Physico mathesis de lumine coloribus et iride aliisque annexis libri duo Bologna Bonomia Italy Vittorio Bonati 1665 page 2 Archived 2016 12 01 at the Wayback Machine Original Nobis alius quartus modus illuxit quem nunc proponimus vocamusque diffractionem quia advertimus lumen aliquando diffringi hoc est partes eius multiplici dissectione separatas per idem tamen medium in diversa ulterius procedere eo modo quem mox declarabimus Translation It has illuminated for us another fourth way which we now make known and call diffraction i e shattering because we sometimes observe light break up that is that parts of the compound i e the beam of light separated by division advance farther through the medium but in different directions as we will soon show Cajori Florian A History of Physics in its Elementary Branches including the evolution of physical laboratories Archived 2016 12 01 at the Wayback Machine MacMillan Company New York 1899 Wireless Communications Principles and Practice Prentice Hall communications engineering and emerging technologies series T S Rappaport Prentice Hall 2002 pg 126 Suryanarayana C Norton M Grant 29 June 2013 X Ray Diffraction A Practical Approach Springer Science amp Business Media p 14 ISBN 978 1 4899 0148 4 Retrieved 7 January 2023 Kokkotas Kostas D 2003 Gravitational Wave Physics Encyclopedia of Physical Science and Technology 67 85 doi 10 1016 B0 12 227410 5 00300 8 ISBN 9780122274107 Juffmann Thomas Milic Adriana Mullneritsch Michael Asenbaum Peter Tsukernik Alexander Tuxen Jens Mayor Marcel Cheshnovsky Ori Arndt Markus 25 March 2012 Real time single molecule imaging of quantum interference Nature Nanotechnology 7 5 297 300 arXiv 1402 1867 Bibcode 2012NatNa 7 297J doi 10 1038 nnano 2012 34 ISSN 1748 3395 PMID 22447163 S2CID 5918772 Komech Alexander Merzon Anatoli 2019 Komech Alexander Merzon Anatoli eds The Early Theory of Diffraction Stationary Diffraction by Wedges Method of Automorphic Functions on Complex Characteristics Cham Springer International Publishing pp 15 17 doi 10 1007 978 3 030 26699 8 2 ISBN 978 3 030 26699 8 retrieved 25 April 2024 Francesco Maria Grimaldi Physico mathesis de lumine coloribus et iride aliisque adnexis The physical mathematics of light color and the rainbow and other things appended Bologna Bonomia Italy Vittorio Bonati 1665 pp 1 11 Archived 2016 12 01 at the Wayback Machine Propositio I Lumen propagatur seu diffunditur non solum directe refracte ac reflexe sed etiam alio quodam quarto modo diffracte Proposition 1 Light propagates or spreads not only in a straight line by refraction and by reflection but also by a somewhat different fourth way by diffraction On p 187 Grimaldi also discusses the interference of light from two sources Propositio XXII Lumen aliquando per sui communicationem reddit obscuriorem superficiem corporis aliunde ac prius illustratam Proposition 22 Sometimes light as a result of its transmission renders dark a body s surface which had been previously illuminated by another source Jean Louis Aubert 1760 Memoires pour l histoire des sciences et des beaux arts Paris Impr de S A S Chez E Ganeau pp 149 grimaldi diffraction 0 1800 Sir David Brewster 1831 A Treatise on Optics London Longman Rees Orme Brown amp Green and John Taylor pp 95 Letter from James Gregory to John Collins dated 13 May 1673 Reprinted in Correspondence of Scientific Men of the Seventeenth Century ed Stephen Jordan Rigaud Oxford England Oxford University Press 1841 vol 2 pp 251 255 especially p 254 Archived 2016 12 01 at the Wayback Machine 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 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 Christiaan Huygens Traite de la lumiere Archived 2016 06 16 at the Wayback Machine Leiden Netherlands Pieter van der Aa 1690 Chapter 1 From p 15 Archived 2016 12 01 at the Wayback Machine J ay donc monstre de quelle facon l on peut concevoir que la lumiere s etend successivement par des ondes spheriques I have thus shown in what manner one can imagine that light propagates successively by spherical waves Note Huygens published his Traite in 1690 however in the preface to his book Huygens states that in 1678 he first communicated his book to the French Royal Academy of Sciences Baker B B amp Copson E T 1939 The Mathematical Theory of Huygens Principle Oxford pp 36 40 Dietrich Zawischa Optical effects on spider webs Retrieved 21 September 2007 Arumugam Nadia 9 September 2013 Food Explainer Why Is Some Deli Meat Iridescent Slate The Slate Group Archived from the original on 10 September 2013 Retrieved 9 September 2013 Andrew Norton 2000 Dynamic fields and waves of physics CRC Press p 102 ISBN 978 0 7503 0719 2 Chiao R Y Garmire E Townes C H 1964 Self Trapping of Optical Beams Physical Review Letters 13 15 479 482 Bibcode 1964PhRvL 13 479C doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 13 479 a b John M Cowley 1975 Diffraction physics North Holland Amsterdam ISBN 0 444 10791 6 Halliday David Resnick Robert Walker Jerl 2005 Fundamental of Physics 7th ed USA John Wiley and Sons Inc ISBN 978 0 471 23231 5 a b Grant R Fowles 1975 Introduction to Modern Optics Courier Corporation ISBN 978 0 486 65957 2 Hecht Eugene 2002 Optics 4th ed United States of America Addison Wesley ISBN 978 0 8053 8566 3 Ayahiko Ichimiya Philip I Cohen 13 December 2004 Reflection High Energy Electron Diffraction Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 45373 8 Archived from the original on 16 July 2017 Neutze Richard Wouts Remco van der Spoel David Weckert Edgar Hajdu Janos August 2000 Potential for biomolecular imaging with femtosecond X ray pulses Nature 406 6797 752 757 Bibcode 2000Natur 406 752N doi 10 1038 35021099 ISSN 1476 4687 PMID 10963603 S2CID 4300920 Chapman Henry N Caleman Carl Timneanu Nicusor 17 July 2014 Diffraction before destruction Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences 369 1647 20130313 doi 10 1098 rstb 2013 0313 PMC 4052855 PMID 24914146 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Diffraction The Feynman Lectures on Physics Vol I Ch 30 Diffraction Scattering and diffraction Crystallography International Union of Crystallography Using a cd as a diffraction grating at YouTube nbsp The Wikibook Nanotechnology has a page on the topic of Nano optics Portals nbsp Physics nbsp Mathematics nbsp Astronomy nbsp Stars nbsp Spaceflight nbsp Outer space Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Diffraction amp oldid 1221805784, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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