Diffraction Grating and Visible Light

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on using a diffraction grating to analyze the visible light spectrum from 400 to 700 nm. Participants clarify that the first and second order spectra do not overlap, while the second and third order spectra do overlap due to the relationship between wavelength and angle of diffraction. The equation nλ = d sin(Θ) is key, where n represents the order of the spectrum, λ is the wavelength, d is the grating spacing, and Θ is the angle of diffraction. The confusion arises from the lack of given grating spacing, but it is established that the maximum angles for different orders can be expressed in terms of d. Ultimately, the problem is resolved by understanding the relationship between the orders and their corresponding angles.
KennedYeti
Messages
5
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement


"You're using a diffraction grating o view the 400 to 700 nm visible spectrum. Suppose you can see the spectrum through the third order. a) Show that the first and second order spectra never overlap regardless of grating spacing. b) show that the second and third order spectra always overlap.

Homework Equations


n λ = dsinΘ

The Attempt at a Solution


for violet light 400nm
sinΘv = 1 × 400⋅10^-9 / 1/400/1000 = sin^-1(400⋅10^-9 / 1/400/1000) = 9.21°
for red light 700nm
sinΘv = 1 × 700⋅10^-9 / 1/700/1000 = sin^-1(700⋅10^-9 / 1/700/1000) = 29.34°

At this point I am completely lost. Any guidance on moving forward would be greatly appreciated. Thanks
 
Physics news on Phys.org
KennedYeti said:

Homework Statement


"You're using a diffraction grating o view the 400 to 700 nm visible spectrum. Suppose you can see the spectrum through the third order. a) Show that the first and second order spectra never overlap regardless of grating spacing. b) show that the second and third order spectra always overlap.

Homework Equations


n λ = dsinΘ

The Attempt at a Solution


for violet light 400nm
sinΘv = 1 × 400⋅10^-9 / 1/400/1000 = sin^-1(400⋅10^-9 / 1/400/1000) = 9.21°
for red light 700nm
sinΘv = 1 × 700⋅10^-9 / 1/700/1000 = sin^-1(700⋅10^-9 / 1/700/1000) = 29.34°

At this point I am completely lost. Any guidance on moving forward would be greatly appreciated. Thanks
The grating spacing(d) is not given. You can not get the numerical values of theta.
 
ehild said:
The grating spacing(d) is not given. You can not get the numerical values of theta.
That is the problem in its entirety. I do not know how to determine the answer when so many variables are missing. I asked my instructor but they said. "What is the maximum angle that the light can be diffracted?" Super Confused!
 
KennedYeti said:
That is the problem in its entirety. I do not know how to determine the answer when so many variables are missing. I asked my instructor but they said. "What is the maximum angle that the light can be diffracted?" Super Confused!
What does it mean that you have first, second and third order spectra? Which letter means the order?

Express sin(theta) in terms of d, for the red and violet light for spectra of all the three orders,
 
ehild said:
What does it mean that you have first, second and third order spectra? Which letter means the order?

Express sin(theta) in terms of d, for the red and violet light for spectra of all the three orders,
I am assuming that it means that I have the first, second and third bright fringe and that the first and second will never overlap and the 2nd and 3rd will.
 
Y
KennedYeti said:
I am assuming that it means that I have the first, second and third bright fringe and that the first and second will never overlap and the 2nd and 3rd will.
Those bright fringes are complete spectra.

upload_2017-3-25_21-24-32.png


What do the letters mean in the formula n λ = dsinΘ?
Express sinΘv and sinΘr in terms of d.
 
ehild said:
Y

Those bright fringes are complete spectra.

View attachment 115029

What do the letters mean in the formula n λ = dsinΘ?
Express sinΘv and sinΘr in terms of d.

n = the bright fringe , λ = wavelength, d = space between each line, Θ = angle that the order is seen.

min = 400nm
max = 700nm
For first order on each end of the spectrum it would be
sinθmin = nλ / d = θ = arcsin(n(400) / d)
sinθmax = nλ / d = θ = arcsin(n(700) / d)

second order would be
sinθmin = 2nλ / d = θ = arcsin(2(400) / d) = arcsin(800/ d)
sinθmax = 2nλ / d = θ = arcsin(2(700) / d) = arcsin(1400 / d)

Third order would be
sinθmin = 3nλ / d = θ = arcsin(3(400) / d) = arcsin(1200n / d)
sinθmax = 3nλ / d = θ = arcsin(3(700) / d) = arcsin(2100n / d)

Because the second order maximum value is greater than the third order minimum, those would overlap. The first and second order do not overlap because the maximum of the 1st will never exceed the value for the 2nd order.
 
KennedYeti said:
n = the bright fringe , λ = wavelength, d = space between each line, Θ = angle that the order is seen.
See: http://www.physics.smu.edu/~scalise/emmanual/diffraction/lab.html
n is a number, not a fringe. It is the order of the diffraction spectrum, produced by the diffraction grating.
What do you mean on "line"? d is the grating constant, the spacing between the scratches on the grating.
Θ is the angle a light ray of certain color is deflected.
KennedYeti said:
min = 400nm
max = 700nm
For first order on each end of the spectrum it would be
sinθmin = nλ / d = θ = arcsin(n(400) / d)
sinθmax = nλ / d = θ = arcsin(n(700) / d)
For the first order n=1.
KennedYeti said:
second order would be
sinθmin = 2nλ / d = θ = arcsin(2(400) / d) = arcsin(800/ d)
sinθmax = 2nλ / d = θ = arcsin(2(700) / d) = arcsin(1400 / d)

Third order would be
sinθmin = 3nλ / d = θ = arcsin(3(400) / d) = arcsin(1200n / d)
sinθmax = 3nλ / d = θ = arcsin(3(700) / d) = arcsin(2100n / d)

Because the second order maximum value is greater than the third order minimum, those would overlap. The first and second order do not overlap because the maximum of the 1st will never exceed the value for the 2nd order.

You solved the problem at last.
 
ehild said:
See: http://www.physics.smu.edu/~scalise/emmanual/diffraction/lab.html
n is a number, not a fringe. It is the order of the diffraction spectrum, produced by the diffraction grating.
What do you mean on "line"? d is the grating constant, the spacing between the scratches on the grating.
Θ is the angle a light ray of certain color is deflected.

For the first order n=1.You solved the problem at last.
Thanks for the help. I was making that waaaaaay to difficult for some reason.
 
Back
Top