diffraction grating
n.
A usually glass or polished metal surface having a large number of very fine parallel grooves or slits and used to produce optical spectra by diffraction of reflected or transmitted light.
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A usually glass or polished metal surface having a large number of very fine parallel grooves or slits and used to produce optical spectra by diffraction of reflected or transmitted light.
An optical device consisting of an assembly of narrow slits or grooves, which by diffracting light produces a large number of beams which can interfere in such a way as to produce spectra. Since the angles at which constructive interference patterns are produced by a grating depend on the lengths of the waves being diffracted, the waves of various lengths in a beam of light striking the grating will be separated into a number of spectra, produced in various orders of interference on either side of an undeviated central image. By controlling the shape and size of the diffracting grooves when producing a grating and by illuminating the grating at suitable angles, a beam of light can be thrown into a single spectrum whose purity and brightness may exceed that produced by a prism. Gratings can now be made with much larger apertures than prisms, and in such form that they waste less light and give higher intrinsic dispersion and resolving power. See also Diffraction.
Transmission gratings consist of a large number of narrow transparent and opaque slits alternating side by side in regular order and with uniform separation, through which a beam of light will appear as a series of spectra in various orders of interference. Reflection gratings, either plane or concave, are used in most spectrographs. Such a grating may consist of an original ruling or of a metal-coated replica from an original. Large grating replicas can now be made which are practically indistinguishable in performance or permanence from an original.
Gratings are engraved by highly precise ruling engines, which use a diamond tool to press into a highly polished mirror surface a series of many thousands of fine shallow burnished grooves. If a grating is to give resolution approaching the theoretical limit, its grooves must be ruled straight, parallel, and equally spaced to within a few tenths of the shortest incident wavelength. Scattered light and false images may arise from local spacing error and groove shape variations of only a few hundredths of the diffracted wavelength.
A grating spectroscope usually consists of a slit, a lens or mirror to collimate the light sent through the slit into a parallel beam, a transmission or reflection grating to disperse the light, a lens or mirror to focus the light into spectrum lines (which are monochromatic images of the slit in the light of each wavelength passing through it), and an eyepiece for viewing the spectrum. If a camera is substituted for the telescope, the instrument becomes a grating spectrograph. If a photoelectric cell, a thermocouple, or other radiation-detecting device is used instead of a camera or telescope, the device becomes a grating spectrometer. See also Infrared spectroscopy.
The noun has one meaning:
Meaning #1:
optical device consisting of a surface with many parallel grooves in it; disperses a beam of light (or other electromagnetic radiation) into its wavelengths to produce its spectrum
Synonym: grating
In optics, a diffraction grating is an optical component with a surface covered by a regular pattern of parallel lines, typically with a distance between the lines comparable to the wavelength of light. Light rays that pass through such a surface are bent as a result of diffraction, related to the wave properties of light. This diffraction angle depends on the wavelength of the light. In its simplest form, a diffraction grating could be a photographic slide with a fine pattern of black lines. However, for practical applications, most gratings have grooves or rulings on their surface rather than dark lines. Such gratings can be either transparent or reflective. Because of their ability of splitting light into different wavelengths (dispersion), gratings are commonly used in monochromators and spectrometers.
For a given grating, light with a larger wavelength generally has a larger diffraction angle. More precisely, a single wavelength can simultaneously have multiple discrete diffraction angles, called diffraction orders.
The first diffraction grating was made around 1785 by Philadelphia inventor David Rittenhouse, who strung hairs between two finely threaded screws. This was similar to notable German physicist Joseph von Fraunhofer's wire diffraction grating in 1821.
Gratings are usually designated by their groove density, the number of grooves per unit length, usually expressed in grooves per millimeter (g/mm), also equal to the inverse of the groove period. The groove period must be on the order of the wavelength in question. In the optical regime, in which the use of gratings is most common, this corresponds to wavelengths between 100 nm and 10 µm. In that case, the groove density can vary from a few tens of grooves per millimeter, as in echelle gratings, to a few thousands of grooves per millimeter.
A fundamental property of gratings is that the angle of deviation of all but one of the diffracted beams depends on the wavelength of the incident light. Therefore, a grating separates an incident polychromatic beam into its constituent wavelength components, i.e., it is dispersive. Each wavelength of input beam spectrum is sent into a different direction, producing a rainbow of colors under white light illumination. This is visually similar to the operation of a prism, although the mechanism is very different.
When a beam is incident on a grating with an angle θi (measured from the normal of the grating), it is diffracted into several beams. The beam that corresponds to direct transmission (or specular reflection in the case of a reflection grating) is called the zero order, and is denoted m = 0. The other orders correspond to diffraction angles which are represented by non-zero integers m. For a groove period d and an incident wavelengh λ, the grating equation gives the value of the diffracted angle θm(λ) in the order m:

Note that m can be positive or negative, resulting in diffracted orders on both sides of the zero order beam. Note also that there exist various conventions for choosing the sign of the angles, possibly resulting in different signs in the grating equation.
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. 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 of the incident light.
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 material the subwavelength gratings give rise to form birefringence, in which the material behaves as if it were birefringent.
Diffraction gratings can be produced by modulating one of the following material properties:
Originally, high-resolution gratings were ruled using high-quality ruling engines whose construction was a large undertaking. Henry Joseph Grayson designed a machine to make diffraction gratings, succeeding with one of 120,000 lines to the inch (2.54 cm) in 1899. Later, photolithographic techniques allowed gratings to be created from a holographic interference pattern. Holographic gratings have sinusoidal grooves and may not be as efficient as ruled gratings, but are often preferred in monochromators 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 within the gel. This removes much of the surface scattering effects typically seen in other types of gratings. These gratings also tend to have higher efficiencies, and allow for the inclusion of complicated patterns into a single grating. 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.
Diffraction gratings are often used in monochromators, spectrometers, wavelength division multiplexing devices, optical pulse compressing devices, and many other optical instruments. In fact, Dispersion Bridge technology for planar lightwave circuits, which is based on diffraction gratings, will likely displace thin-film filter technology and other bulk optics approaches to processing optical signals in both fiber to the home and wavelength division multiplexing devices.
Ordinary pressed CD and DVD media are every-day examples of diffraction gratings and can be used to demonstrate the effect by reflecting sunlight off them onto a white wall. This is a side effect of their manufacture, as one surface of a CD has many small pits in the plastic, arranged 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.
The image sensor of a digital camera has a fine pattern which can produce a diffraction artifact on the image.
Diffraction gratings are also present in nature. For example, the iridescent colors of peacock feathers, mother-of-pearl, butterfly wings, and some other insects are caused by very fine regular structures that diffract light, splitting it into its component colors.
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