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Diffraction Grating

Revision as of 17:31, 23 May 2024 by NRJC (talk | contribs) (โ†’โ€ŽAbout Diffraction Gratings)

Key Stage 5

Meaning

A diffraction grating is a plate with many closely ruled parallel slits that disperses white light into a spectrum or produce several diverging beams from a single laser beam.

About Diffraction Gratings

  • Diffraction gratings produce multiple diffraction orders for a single monochromatic beam of laser light.
  • When white light is incident upon a diffraction grating it will produce a single white band of light in the centre of the screen followed by a series of repeating spectra. As the distance from the centre of the screen increases with violet closest to the centre and red furthest.
  • Diffraction Gratings can resolve very fine details in the spectrum, making them useful in spectroscopy.
DiffractionGratingExperimentRed.png
This image shows a diffraction grating splitting a red laser beam into a zeroth, first, second and third order beam.
DiffractionGratingExperimentGreen.png
This image shows a diffraction grating splitting a green laser beam into a zeroth, first, second, third and fourth order beam.
DiffractionGratingExperimentBlue.png
This image shows a diffraction grating splitting a green laser beam into a zeroth, first, second, third, fourth and fifth order beam.

Formula

  • \(๐‘‘sin๐œƒ=๐‘›๐œ†\)

Where:

๐‘‘ is the slit spacing (though frequently the number of slits per mm is given and this must be calculated first)

๐œƒ is the angle between the beam order and the central axis

๐‘› is the beam order with the zeroth beam order being along the central axis and the first beam order being smallest angle from beam to central axis

๐œ† is the wavelength of the beam