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Diffraction grating

 
Diffraction Grating

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Diffraction grating



 
 
In optics
Optics

Optics is the study of the behavior and properties of light including its optical phenomena with matter and its imaging by optical instruments....
, a diffraction grating
Diffraction grating

In optics, a diffraction grating is an optical component with a regular pattern, which splits light into several beams travelling in different directions....
 is an optical component with a regular pattern, which splits (diffracts
Diffraction

Diffraction is normally taken to refer to various phenomena which occur when a wave encounters an obstacle. It is described as the apparent bending of waves around small obstacles and the spreading out of waves past small openings....
) light into several beams travelling in different directions. The directions of these beams depend on the spacing of the grating and the wavelength of the light so that the grating acts as a dispersive
Dispersion (optics)

In optics, dispersion is the phenomenon in which the phase velocity of a wave depends on its frequency.Media having such a property are termed dispersive media....
 element.






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Diffraction Grating
In optics
Optics

Optics is the study of the behavior and properties of light including its optical phenomena with matter and its imaging by optical instruments....
, a diffraction grating
Diffraction grating

In optics, a diffraction grating is an optical component with a regular pattern, which splits light into several beams travelling in different directions....
 is an optical component with a regular pattern, which splits (diffracts
Diffraction

Diffraction is normally taken to refer to various phenomena which occur when a wave encounters an obstacle. It is described as the apparent bending of waves around small obstacles and the spreading out of waves past small openings....
) light into several beams travelling in different directions. The directions of these beams depend on the spacing of the grating and the wavelength of the light so that the grating acts as a dispersive
Dispersion (optics)

In optics, dispersion is the phenomenon in which the phase velocity of a wave depends on its frequency.Media having such a property are termed dispersive media....
 element. Because of this, gratings are commonly used in monochromator
Monochromator

A monochromator is an optics device that transmits a mechanically selectable narrow band of wavelengths of light or other radiation chosen from a wider range of wavelengths available at the input....
s and spectrometer
Spectrometer

A spectrograph is an optical instrument used to measure properties of light over a specific portion of the electromagnetic spectrum, typically used in spectroscopic analysis to identify materials....
s.

A photographic slide with a fine pattern of black lines forms a simple grating. For practical applications, gratings generally have grooves or rulings on their surface rather than dark lines. Such gratings can be either transparent
Transparency (optics)

In optics, transparency is the material property of allowing light to pass through. In mineralogy, another term for this property is diaphaneity....
 or reflective. Gratings which modulate the phase rather than the amplitude of the incident light are also produced, frequently using holography
Holography

A hologram is a picture that changes when looked at from different angles.Holography is a technique that allows the light scattered from an object to be recorded and later reconstructed so that it appears as if the object is in the same position relative to the recording medium as it was when recorded....
.

The principles of diffraction gratings were discovered by James Gregory
James Gregory (astronomer and mathematician)

James Gregory , was a Scotland mathematician and astronomer. It has been said that "Of the British mathematicians of the seventeenth century, Gregory was only excelled by Isaac Newton."...
, about a year after Newton's Prism experiments, initially with artifacts such as bird feathers. The first man-made diffraction grating was made around 1785
1785 in science

The year 1785 in science and technology involved some significant events....
 by Philadelphia inventor David Rittenhouse
David Rittenhouse

David Rittenhouse was a renowned United States astronomer, inventor, clockmaker, mathematician, Surveyor , scientific instrument craftsman, and public official....
, who strung hairs between two finely threaded screws. This was similar to notable German physicist Joseph von Fraunhofer
Joseph von Fraunhofer

Joseph von Fraunhofer was a Germany optician. He is known for the discovery of the dark absorption lines known as Fraunhofer lines in the Sun's spectrum, and for making excellent optical glass and achromatic telescope objectives....
's wire diffraction grating in 1821
1821 in science

The year 1821 in science and technology involved some significant events, listed below....
.

Theory of operation


The relationship between the grating spacing and the angles of the incident and diffracted beams of light is known as the grating equation.

When a wave propagates, each point on the wavefront can be considered to act as a point source, and the wavefront at any subsequent point can be found by adding together the contributions from each of these individual point sources.

An idealised grating is considered here which is made up of a set of long and infinitely narrow slits of spacing d. When a plane wave of wavelength ?, is incident normally on the grating, each of the point slits in the grating acts as a set of point sources which propagate in all directions. The light in a particular direction, ?, is made up of the interfering
Interference

In physics, interference is the addition of two or more waves that result in a new wave pattern.Interference usually refers to the interaction of waves which are correlated or Coherence with each other, either because they come from the same source or because they have the same or nearly the same frequency....
 components from each slit. Generally, the phases of the waves from different slits will vary from one another, and will cancel one another out partially or wholly. However, when the path difference between the light from adjacent slits is equal to the wavelength, ?, the waves will all be in phase. This occurs at angles ?m which satisfy the relationship dsin?m/?=|m| where d is the separation of the slits and m is an integer. Thus, the diffracted light will have maxima at angles ?m given by

It is straightforward to show that if a plane wave is incident at an angle ?i, the grating equation becomes

The light that corresponds to direct transmission (or specular reflection
Specular reflection

Specular reflection is the perfect, mirror-like reflection of light from a surface, in which light from a single incoming direction is reflected into a single outgoing direction....
 in the case of a reflection grating) is called the zero order, and is denoted m = 0. The other maxima occur at angles which are represented by non-zero integers m. Note that m can be positive or negative, resulting in diffracted orders on both sides of the zero order beam.

This derivation of the grating equation has used an idealised grating. However, the relationship between the angles of the diffracted beams, the grating spacing and the wavelength of the light apply to any regular structure of the same spacing, because the phase relationship between light scattered from adjacent elements of the grating remains the same. The detailed distribution of the diffracted light depends on the detailed structure of the grating elements as well as on the number of elements in the grating, but it will always give maxima in the directions given by the grating equation.

Gratings can be made in which various properties of the incident light are modulated in a regular pattern; these include

  • transparency
    Transmittance

    In optics and spectroscopy, transmittance is the fraction of incident light at a specified wavelength that passes through a sample. Specifically, visible transmittance is this fraction for visible light....
     (transmission amplitude gratings)
  • reflectance
    Reflectivity

    In photometry and heat transfer, reflectivity is the fraction of incident radiation Reflection by a surface. In general it must be treated as a directional property that is a function of the reflected direction, the incident direction, and the incident wavelength....
     (reflection amplitude gratings)
  • refractive index
    Refractive index

    The refractive index of a medium is a measure for how much the speed of light is reduced inside the medium. For example, typical soda-lime glass has a refractive index of 1.5, which means that in glass, light travels at times the speed of light in a vacuum....
     (phase gratings)
  • direction of optical axis
    Optical axis

    In optics, the term optical axis is used to define a direction along which there is some degree of rotational symmetry. It can be used in several contexts:...
     (optical axis gratings)


The grating equation applies in all these cases.

Gratings as dispersive elements


The wavelength dependence in the grating equation shows that the grating separates an incident polychromatic
Polychromatic

The term polychromatic is used to described light that exhibits more than one color. In a technical respect, this can also mean that it contains radiation of more than one wavelength....
 beam into its constituent wavelength components, i.e., it is dispersive
Dispersion (optics)

In optics, dispersion is the phenomenon in which the phase velocity of a wave depends on its frequency.Media having such a property are termed dispersive media....
. Each wavelength of input beam spectrum
Electromagnetic spectrum

The electromagnetic spectrum is the range of all possible electromagnetic radiation frequencies. The "electromagnetic spectrum" of an object is the characteristic distribution of electromagnetic radiation from that particular object....
 is sent into a different direction, producing a rainbow
Rainbow

A rainbow is an optics and meteorology phenomenon that causes a optical spectrum of light to appear in the sky when the Sun shines onto droplets of moisture in the Earth's atmosphere....
 of colors under white light illumination. This is visually similar to the operation of a prism, although the mechanism is very different.

Light Bulb Grating
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.

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 energy in a particular order for a given wavelength. A triangular profile is commonly used. This technique is called blazing
Blazed grating

A blazed grating is a special type of diffraction grating used in astronomy telescope.Blazed gratings produce maximum efficiency at a specified wavelength; that is, a diffraction grating that is "blazed at 250nm" will operate most efficiently when light with a wavelength of 250nm passes through the grating....
.
The incident angle and wavelength for which the diffraction is most efficient are often called blazing angle and blazing wavelength. The efficiency of a grating may also depend on the polarization
Polarization

Polarization is a property of waves that describes the orientation of their oscillations. For transverse waves such as many electromagnetic waves, it describes the orientation of the oscillations in the plane perpendicular to the wave's direction of travel....
 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
Periodicity

Periodicity is the quality of occurring at regular intervals or periods and can occur in different contexts:In timing devices:* A clock marks time at periodic intervals....
. The groove period must be on the order of the wavelength
Wavelength

In physics, wavelength is the distance between repeating units of a propagating wave of a given frequency. It is commonly designated by the Greek language letter lambda ....
 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. The maximum wavelength that a grating can diffract is equal to twice the grating period, in which case the incident and diffracted light will be at ninety degrees to the grating normal. To obtain frequency dispersion over a wider frequency one must use a prism
Prism

Prism may refer to:...
. In the optical regime, in which the use of gratings is most common, this corresponds to wavelengths between 100 nm and 10 µm
Micrometre

A micrometre or micron is one Micro- of a metre, or equivalently one thousandth of a millimetre. It is also commonly known as a micron....
. In that case, the groove density can vary from a few tens of grooves per millimeter, as in echelle gratings
Echelle grating

An echelle grating is a type of diffraction grating which is characterised by a relatively low grooves density but is optimized for high diffraction order....
, 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 are called subwavelength gratings and exhibit special optical properties. Made on an isotropic
Isotropy

Isotropy is uniformity in all directions. Precise definitions depend on the subject area. The word is made up from Greek iso and tropos ....
 material the subwavelength gratings give rise to form birefringence, in which the material behaves as if it were birefringent.

Fabrication

Originally, high-resolution gratings were ruled using high-quality ruling engines whose construction was a large undertaking. Henry Joseph Grayson
Henry Joseph Grayson

Henry Joseph Grayson was a nurseryman and scientist, best known as the designer of a machine for ruling diffraction gratings.Grayson was born in Worrall, near Sheffield, Yorkshire, England, son of Joseph Grayson, master cutler, and his wife Fanny, n?e Smith....
 designed a machine to make diffraction gratings, succeeding with one of 120,000 lines to the inch (approx. 47 000 per cm) in 1899. Later, photolithographic
Lithography

Lithography is a method for printing using a stone or a metal plate with a completely smooth surface. By contrast, in intaglio a plate is engraving, etching or mezzotint to make cavities to contain the printing ink, and in woodblock printing and letterpress ink is applied to the raised surfaces of letters or images....
 techniques allowed gratings to be created from a holographic
Holography

A hologram is a picture that changes when looked at from different angles.Holography is a technique that allows the light scattered from an object to be recorded and later reconstructed so that it appears as if the object is in the same position relative to the recording medium as it was when recorded....
 interference pattern. Holographic grating
Holographic grating

A holographic grating is a type of diffraction grating formed by an interference-fringe field of two laser beams whose standing-wave pattern is exposed to a polished substrate coated with photoresist....
s have sinusoidal grooves and may not be as efficient as ruled gratings, but are often preferred in monochromator
Monochromator

A monochromator is an optics device that transmits a mechanically selectable narrow band of wavelengths of light or other radiation chosen from a wider range of wavelengths available at the input....
s because they lead to much less stray light. A copying technique allows high quality replicas to be made from master gratings, thereby lowering fabrication costs.

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
Refractive index

The refractive index of a medium is a measure for how much the speed of light is reduced inside the medium. For example, typical soda-lime glass has a refractive index of 1.5, which means that in glass, light travels at times the speed of light in a vacuum....
 within the gel. This removes much of the surface scattering
Scattering

Scattering is a general physical process where some forms of radiation, such as light, sound, or moving particles,are forced to deviate from a straight trajectory by one or more localized non-uniformities in the medium through which they pass....
 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. 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 which make them resistant to humidity, thermal and mechanical stresses. VPH diffraction gratings are not destroyed by accidental touches and are more scratch resistant than typical relief gratings.

Semiconductor technology today is also utilized to etch holographically patterned gratings into robust materials 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.

A new technology for grating insertion into integrated photonic lightwave circuits is digital planar holography
Digital planar holography

Digital Planar Holography is a new technology, developed recently for fabricating miniature components for integrated optics. The essence of the DPH technology is embedding Digital holography, calculated in a computer, inside a Waveguide #Dielectric slab waveguide....
 (DPH). DPH gratings are generated in computer and fabricated on one or several interfaces of an optical waveguide planar with 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

Interference Colors
Diffraction gratings are often used in monochromator
Monochromator

A monochromator is an optics device that transmits a mechanically selectable narrow band of wavelengths of light or other radiation chosen from a wider range of wavelengths available at the input....
s, spectrometer
Spectrometer

A spectrograph is an optical instrument used to measure properties of light over a specific portion of the electromagnetic spectrum, typically used in spectroscopic analysis to identify materials....
s, wavelength division multiplexing devices, optical pulse compressing devices, and many other optical instruments.

Ordinary pressed CD
Compact Disc

A Compact Disc is an optical disc used to store Data , originally developed for storing digital audio. The CD, available on the market since October 1982, remains the standard physical medium for sale of commercial Sound recording and reproduction to the present day....
 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 within concentric rings; 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.

In a standard pressed vinyl record
Gramophone record

A gramophone record is an analog signal sound storage medium consisting of a flat disc with an inscribed modulated spiral groove usually starting near the periphery and ending near the centre of the disc....
 when viewed from a low angle perpendicular to the grooves, a similar but less defined effect to that seen in a CD/DVD. 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.

The image sensor
Image sensor

An image sensor is a device that converts an optical image to an electric signal. It is used mostly in digital cameras and other imaging devices....
 of a digital camera
Digital camera

A digital camera is a camera that takes video or still photographs, or both, digitally by recording digital image via an electronics .Many compact digital still cameras can record sound and moving video as well as still photographs....
 has a fine pattern which can produce a diffraction artifact
Lens flare

Lens flare is the light scattered in lens systems through generally unwanted image formation mechanisms, such as internal reflection and scattering from material inhomogeneities in the lens....
 on the image.

Diffraction gratings are also present in nature. For example, the iridescent colors of peacock feathers, mother-of-pearl, butterfly
Butterfly

A butterfly is an insect of the Order Lepidoptera. Like all Lepidoptera, butterflies are notable for their unusual Biological life cycle with a larval caterpillar stage, an inactive pupal stage, and a spectacular metamorphosis into a familiar and colourful winged adult form....
 wings, and some other insect
Insect

Insects are the biggest class of arthropods and the only ones with wings. They are the most diverse group of animals on the planet. They are most diverse at the equator and their diversity declines toward the poles....
s are caused by very fine regular structures that diffract light, splitting it into its component colors.

See also

  • Henry Augustus Rowland
  • Zone plate
    Zone plate

    A zone plate is a device used to Focus light. Unlike lens however, zone plates use diffraction instead of refraction. Created by Augustin-Jean Fresnel [fre?'nel], they are sometimes called Fresnel zone plates in his honor....


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