bhav007 said:
I was wondering what the diffraction pattern would be like if the suns light is diffracted through a pin hole or double slit diffraction grating compared to that of a laser beam?
This is an interesting question with a surprisingly complex answer. Consider these images- first, sunlight through leaves during a solar eclipse:
https://www.google.com/search?q="so...KW0QGN2YGIDQ&ved=0CAcQ_AUoAQ&biw=1372&bih=791
And these images made with a 'camera obscura':
http://danhume.wordpress.com/2010/10/12/camera-obscura/
Aside from chromatic effects, laser light (or any source with a high spatial coherence) would behave very differently- illuminating a camera obscura with a plane wave would result in a Airy disc at the 'image plane' instead of an image of the source. Similarly, illuminating a tree with laser light would not produce multiple images of the beam.
The reason has to do with the spatial extent of the source. The angular diameter of the sun is about 0.5 degrees, while a source producing a pure plane wave subtends 0 degrees (think of distant stars). Typically, far-field diffraction patterns are calculated using a plane wave incident on the aperture, and this is not the case with sunlight.
The quantitative measure of illumination relevant here is the 'coherence area', which is infinite for a plane wave and in general A = λ^2/Ω, where Ω is the angular size of the source. For the sun, A = 0.003 mm^2, while for a distant star, A = 6 m^2. The coherence area is a measure of how far apart two slits can be and still produce an interference pattern.
For the camera obscura and illumination through leaves, the 'pinhole size' is larger than the coherence area, and so there are no interference fringes- geometrical optics holds. If you make the pinhole size smaller than the coherence area, you will obtain the usual interference patterns, and you can observe speckle with sunlight as well- the 'speckles' are about 0.06 mm in diameter:
http://www.itp.uni-hannover.de/~zawischa/ITP/diffraction.html
The relevant theory (Coherence theory,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coherence_theory) is fairly broad, but a good introduction is here:
http://maxwell.uncc.edu/gjgbur/papers and CV/030gbur.pdf
https://www.amazon.com/dp/0521822114/?tag=pfamazon01-20
And the standard reference text is here:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/0521417112/?tag=pfamazon01-20