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Prism (optics)

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Prism (optics)



 
 
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 prism is a transparent optical element with flat, polished surfaces that refract
Refraction

Refraction is the change in direction of a wave due to a change in its speed. This is most commonly observed when a wave passes from one optical medium to another....
 light
Light

Light, or visible light, is electromagnetic radiation of a wavelength that is Visible spectrum to the human eye , or up to 380?750 nm. In the broader field of physics, light is sometimes used to refer to electromagnetic radiation of all wavelengths, whether visible or not....
. The exact angles between the surfaces depend on the application. The traditional geometrical shape is that of a triangular prism
Triangular prism

In geometry, a triangular prism or three-sided prism is a type of Prism ; it is a polyhedron made of a triangle base, a Translation copy, and 3 faces joining corresponding sides....
 with a triangular base and rectangular sides, and in colloquial use "prism" usually refers to this type.






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Prismandlight
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 prism is a transparent optical element with flat, polished surfaces that refract
Refraction

Refraction is the change in direction of a wave due to a change in its speed. This is most commonly observed when a wave passes from one optical medium to another....
 light
Light

Light, or visible light, is electromagnetic radiation of a wavelength that is Visible spectrum to the human eye , or up to 380?750 nm. In the broader field of physics, light is sometimes used to refer to electromagnetic radiation of all wavelengths, whether visible or not....
. The exact angles between the surfaces depend on the application. The traditional geometrical shape is that of a triangular prism
Triangular prism

In geometry, a triangular prism or three-sided prism is a type of Prism ; it is a polyhedron made of a triangle base, a Translation copy, and 3 faces joining corresponding sides....
 with a triangular base and rectangular sides, and in colloquial use "prism" usually refers to this type. Some types of optical prism are not in fact in the shape of geometric prisms
Prism (geometry)

In geometry, an n-sided prism is a polyhedron made of an n-sided polygon base, a Translation copy, and n faces joining corresponding sides....
. Prisms are typically made out of glass
Glass

Glass generally refers to a Hardness, brittle, transparency amorphous solid, such as that used for windows, many Glass Bottles, or eyewear, including, but not limited to, soda-lime glass, borosilicate glass, acrylic glass, sugar glass, Muscovite , or aluminium oxynitride....
, but can be made from any material that is transparent to 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 ....
s for which they are designed.

A prism can be used to break light up into its constituent spectral
Spectrum

A spectrum is a condition that is not limited to a specific set of values but can vary infinitely within a Continuum . The word saw its first scientific use within the field of optics to describe the rainbow of colors in visible light when separated using a triangular prism ; it has since been applied by analogy to many fields other than op...
 color
Color

Color or colour is the visual perception property corresponding in humans to the categories called red, yellow, blue and others....
s (the colors of the 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....
). Prisms can also be used to reflect
Reflection (physics)

Reflection is the change in direction of a wavefront at an wiktionary:interface between two differentmedium so that the wavefront returns into the medium from which it originated....
 light, or to split light into components with different 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....
s.

How prisms work


Light changes speed
Speed

Speed is the rate of Motion , or equivalently the rate of change of distance.Speed is a Scalar quantity with dimensions length/time; the equivalent Vector quantity to speed is velocity....
 as it moves from one medium to another (for example, from air into the glass of the prism). This speed change causes the light to be refracted and to enter the new medium at a different angle (Huygens principle). The degree of bending of the light's path depends on the angle that the incident
Incident

Incident may refer to:* A property of a graph *Incident, Culfest of NITK Surathkal, a cultural festival of The National Institute of Technology in Surathkal, Karnataka, India...
 beam of light makes with the surface, and on the ratio between the refractive indices
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....
 of the two media (Snell's law
Snell's law

In optics and physics, Snell's law , is a mathematical formula used to describe the relationship between the angles of incidence and refraction, when referring to light or other waves, passing through a boundary between two different isotropic medium , such as water and glass....
). The refractive index of many materials (such as glass) varies with 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 ....
 or color of the light used, a phenomenon known as dispersion
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....
. This causes light of different colors to be refracted differently and to leave the prism at different angles, creating an effect similar to 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....
. This can be used to separate a beam of white light into its constituent spectrum
Spectrum

A spectrum is a condition that is not limited to a specific set of values but can vary infinitely within a Continuum . The word saw its first scientific use within the field of optics to describe the rainbow of colors in visible light when separated using a triangular prism ; it has since been applied by analogy to many fields other than op...
 of colors. Prisms will generally disperse light over a much larger frequency bandwidth than 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....
s, making them useful for broad-spectrum spectroscopy
Spectroscopy

Spectroscopy was originally the study of the interaction between radiation and matter as a function of wavelength . In fact, historically, spectroscopy referred to the use of visible light dispersed according to its wavelength, e.g....
. Furthermore, prisms do not suffer from complications arising from overlapping spectral orders, which all gratings have.

Prisms are sometimes used for the internal reflection at the surfaces rather than for dispersion. If light inside the prism hits one of the surfaces at a sufficiently steep angle, total internal reflection
Total internal reflection

Total internal reflection is an optical phenomenon that occurs when a ray of light strikes a medium boundary at an angle larger than the critical angle with respect to the normal to the surface....
 occurs and all of the light is reflected. This makes a prism a useful substitute for a mirror
Mirror

A mirror is an object with one surface polished, which leads to reflection and another opaque. The most familiar type of mirror is the plane mirror, which has a flat surface....
 in some situations.

Prisms and the nature of light

In Isaac Newton
Isaac Newton

Sir Isaac Newton, Fellow of the Royal Society was an English people physicist, mathematician, Astronomy, Natural philosophy, Alchemy, and Theology and one of the the 100 in human history....
's time, it was believed that white light was colorless, and that the prism itself produced the color. Newton's experiments convinced him that all the colors already existed in the light in a heterogeneous fashion, and that "corpuscles" (particles) of light were fanned out because particles with different colors traveled with different speeds through the prism. It was only later that Young
Thomas Young (scientist)

Thomas Young was an England polymath who made notable contributions to the fields of Visual perception, light, solid mechanics, energy, physiology, language, harmony and Egyptology....
 and Fresnel combined Newton's particle theory with Huygen's wave theory to show that color is the visible manifestation of light's wavelength.

Newton arrived at his conclusion by passing the red color from one prism through a second prism and found the color unchanged. From this, he concluded that the colors must already be present in the incoming light — thus, the prism did not create colors, but merely separated colors that are already there. He also used a lens and a second prism to recompose the spectrum back into white light. This experiment has become a classic example of the methodology introduced during the scientific revolution
Scientific revolution

The period which many History of science call the Scientific Revolution is commonly viewed as the foundation and origin of modern science.It was a time roughly coinciding with the later part of the Middle Ages and through the Renaissance in which scientific ideas in physics, astronomy, and biology evolved rapidly....
. The results of this experiment dramatically transformed the field of metaphysics
Metaphysics

Metaphysics investigates principles of reality transcending those of any particular science. cosmology and ontology are traditional branches of metaphysics....
, leading to John Locke
John Locke

John Locke was an English philosopher. Locke is considered the first of the British Empiricism, but is equally important to social contract theory....
's primary vs secondary quality distinction
Primary/secondary quality distinction

The primary/secondary quality distinction is a conceptual distinction in epistemology and metaphysics, concerning the nature of reality. It is most explicitly articulated by John Locke in his Essay concerning Human Understanding, but earlier thinkers such as Galileo and Descartes made similar distinctions....
.

Newton discussed prism dispersion in great detail in his book Opticks
Opticks

Opticks is a book written by England physicist Isaac Newton that was released to the public in 1704. It is about optics and the refraction of light, and is considered one of the great works of science in history....
. He also introduced the use of more than one prism to control dispersion. Newton's description of his experiments on prism dispersion was qualitative, and is quite readable. A quantitative description of multiple-prism dispersion was not needed until multiple prism laser beam expander
Beam expander

Beam expanders are used in laser physics either as intracavity or extracavity elements. They can be telescopic in nature or prismatic. Generally prismatic beam expanders use several prisms and are known as multiple-prism beam expanders....
s were introduced in the 1980s.

Types of prisms


Dispersive prisms

Dispersive prisms are used to break up light into its constituent spectral colors because the refractive index depends on frequency
Frequency

Frequency is the number of occurrences of a repeating event per unit time. It is also referred to as temporal frequency.The period is the duration of one cycle in a repeating event, so the period is the reciprocal of the frequency....
; the white light entering the prism is a mixture of different frequencies, each of which gets bent slightly differently. Blue light is slowed down more than red light and will therefore be bent more than red light.

  • Triangular prism
  • Abbe prism
    Abbe prism

    In optics, an Abbe prism, named for its inventor, the German physicist Ernst Abbe, is a type of constant deviation dispersion prism similar to a Pellin-Broca prism....
  • Pellin-Broca prism
    Pellin-Broca prism

    A Pellin-Broca prism is a type of constant deviation dispersion prism similar to an Abbe prism.The prism is named for its inventors, the France instrument maker Ph....
  • Amici prism
    Amici prism

    File:Direct-vision Prism.svgAn Amici prism, named for the astronomer Giovanni Amici, is a type of compound dispersion prism which is used as a spectrometer....


Grisms (grating prisms)
Diffraction gratings may be replicated onto prisms to form grating prisms, called "grisms". A transmission grism is a useful component in an astronomical telescope
Optical telescope

An optical telescope is a telescope which is used to gather and Focus light mainly from the Visible spectrum part of the electromagnetic spectrum for directly viewing a magnification image for making a photograph, or collecting data through electronic s....
, allowing observation of stellar spectra. A reflection grating replicated onto a prism allows light to diffract inside the prism medium, which increases the dispersion by the ratio of refractive index of that medium to that of air.

Reflective prisms

Reflective prisms are used to reflect light, for instance in binoculars
Binoculars

Binocular telescopes, or binoculars , are two identical or mirror-symmetry optical telescopes mounted side-by-side and aligned to point accurately in the same direction, allowing the viewer to use both eyes when viewing distant objects....
 and prismatic sighting compasses.

  • Pentaprism
    Pentaprism

    A pentaprism is a five-sided reflecting prism used to deviate a beam of light by 90?. The beam reflects inside the prism twice, allowing the transmission of an image through a right angle without inverting it as an ordinary right-angle prism or mirror would....
  • Porro prism
    Porro prism

    In optics, a Porro prism, named for its inventor Ignazio Porro, is a type of reflection prism used in optical instruments to alter the orientation of an ....
  • Porro-Abbe prism
    Porro-Abbe prism

    A Porro-Abbe prism , named for Ignazio Porro and Ernst Abbe, is a type of reflection prism used in some optical instruments to alter the orientation of an image....
  • Abbe-Koenig prism
    Abbe-Koenig prism

    An Abbe-Koenig prism is a type of reflecting prism used to invert an image . They are commonly used in binoculars and some telescopes for this purpose....
  • Schmidt-Pechan prism
    Schmidt-Pechan prism

    A Schmidt-Pechan prism is a type of prism used to rotate an image by degree . They are commonly used in binoculars as an image erecting system....
  • Dove prism
    Dove prism

    A Dove prism is a type of reflective prism which is used to invert an . Dove prisms are shaped from a truncated right-angle prism . A beam of light entering one of the sloped faces of the prism undergoes total internal reflection from the inside of the longest face and emerges from the opposite sloped face....
  • Dichroic prism
    Dichroic prism

    A dichroic prism is a prism that splits light into two beams of differing wavelength . They are usually constructed of one or more glass prisms with dichroism optical coatings that selectively reflect or transmit light depending on the light's wavelength....
  • Amici roof prism
    Amici roof prism

    An Amici roof prism, named for its inventor, the Italian astronomer Giovanni Amici, is a type of reflecting prism used to deviate a beam of light by 90? while simultaneously inverting the image....


Polarizing prisms

There are also polarizing prisms which can split a beam of light into components of varying 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....
. These are typically made of a birefringent crystalline material.
  • Nicol prism
    Nicol prism

    A Nicol prism is a type of polarizer, an optical device used to generate a beam of polarization. It was the first type of polarizing prism to be invented, in 1828 by William Nicol of Edinburgh....
  • Wollaston prism
    Wollaston prism

    A Wollaston prism is an optical device, invented by William Hyde Wollaston, that manipulates Polarization light. It separates randomly polarized or unpolarized light into two Orthogonality, linearly polarizer outgoing beams....
  • Nomarski prism
    Nomarski prism

    A Nomarski prism is a modification of the Wollaston prism, which is used in differential interference contrast microscopy. The Poland physicist Georges Nomarski contributed to the development of Differential Interference Contrast microscopy, by developing the Nomarski prism....
     - a variant of the Wollastom prism with advantages in microscopy
  • Rochon prism
    Rochon prism

    A Rochon prism is a type of Polarizer. It is made from two prism s of a Birefringence material such as calcite, which are cemented together....
  • Sénarmont prism
    Sénarmont prism

    The S?narmont prism is a type of polariser. It is made from two prism s of a Birefringence material such as calcite, with an air space between them....
  • Glan–Foucault prism
  • Glan–Taylor prism
  • Glan–Thompson prism


See also

  • Fresnel biprism
  • Minimum deviation
    Minimum deviation

    The minimum deviation, if it exists, of the angle between the incident light ray and the emerging one after transmission through an object such as a prism or a water drop....
  • Prism compressor
    Prism compressor

    A prism compressor is an optics device used to shorten the duration of a positively chirped ultrashort pulse by giving different wavelength components a different time delay....
  • Prism dioptre
    Prism dioptre

    Prism dioptre is a unit of angular measurement that is commonly used in ophthalmology to express prism correction in eyeglass prescriptions. The prism dioptre of a corrective lens is equal to a hundred times the tangent of the angle by which it displaces an image seen through the lens....
  • Prism (geometry)
    Prism (geometry)

    In geometry, an n-sided prism is a polyhedron made of an n-sided polygon base, a Translation copy, and n faces joining corresponding sides....
  • The Dark Side of the Moon
    The Dark Side of the Moon

    The Dark Side of the Moon is a concept album by the England progressive rock Musical ensemble Pink Floyd. It was released on 17 March 1973 in the United States and 24 March 1973 in the United Kingdom....
    , a 1973 Pink Floyd album noted for the prism on its cover
  • Theory of Colours
    Theory of Colours

    Theory of Colours is a book by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe published in 1810. The work comprises three sections: i) a didactic section in which Goethe presents his own observations, ii) a polemic section in which he makes his case against Newton, and iii) a historical section....
  • Triangular prism
    Triangular prism

    In geometry, a triangular prism or three-sided prism is a type of Prism ; it is a polyhedron made of a triangle base, a Translation copy, and 3 faces joining corresponding sides....
     (geometry)
  • Superprism
    Superprism

    A superprism is a photonic crystal in which an entering beam of light will lead to an extremely large angular dispersion_....
  • Eyeglass prescription
    Eyeglass prescription

    An eyeglass prescription is a written order by an optometrist or ophthalmologist to an optician for eyeglasses. It specifies the refractive power to which the eyeglasses are to be made in order to correct blurred Visual perception due to refraction error, including myopia, hyperopia, astigmatism , and presbyopia....


External links

  • iPhone utility that simulates lasers going through prisms using Snell's Law