Light Diffraction physics problem

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around a light diffraction problem involving wavelengths of 400 nm and 700 nm, aiming for a 30-degree spread in diffraction angles. The key misunderstanding is that the angles for each wavelength should differ by 30 degrees, rather than either angle being 30 degrees. To find the angles, the diffraction equation λ = d sin(θ) must be rearranged to express θ in terms of λ and d. By deriving separate equations for θ1 and θ2, the spread can be calculated as θ2 - θ1, incorporating the spacing d. The solution requires careful manipulation of these equations to accurately determine the diffraction angles.
Tkdmaster
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Homework Statement
You have project in your physics class to build a diffraction grating. The key component is that you need to disperse visible light over a 30-degress spread at the first order. Visible light has a range of 400-700nm. How many lines per mm do you need for your diffraction grating?
Relevant Equations
mλ =dsin(Θ)
Been trying to figure this problem out for a couple hours now, if i use 400 nm into the equation it comes out to 800: 400=sin(30). If i do 700 nm it comes out to 1400: 700=sin(30).

I feel like i’m doing somethingwrong with the problem but i can’t figure out what.
 
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you need to disperse visible light over a 30-degress spread at the first order
This means that the difference between the diffraction angles for 400 nm and 700 nm needs to be 30°, not that either of those angles needs to be 30°. For example (just making up numbers here!) you might end up with something like θ = 22° for λ = 400 nm and θ = 52° for λ = 700 nm, for a spread of 52° - 22° = 30°.
 
The thing is though, i don't know how to determine what those angles would be.
 
Tkdmaster said:
The thing is though, i don't know how to determine what those angles would be.
Suppose you choose a spacing d. Through what angles will the extremes of visible light be diffracted (to the first order)?
 
Call the extreme wavelengths ##\lambda_1## and ##\lambda_2##. They diffract through angles ##\theta_1## and ##\theta_2##. Can you write an equation that gives the spread in angles, ##\theta_2 - \theta_1##, in terms of ##\lambda_1##, ##\lambda_2##, and ##d##? That is, ##\theta_2 - \theta_1 = \cdots##
 
Like 700-400=dsin(theta2-theta1)?
 
No, you can't do it by simply substituting ##\theta_2 - \theta_1## for ##\theta##, and ##\lambda_2 - \lambda_1## for ##\lambda##.

Start with your diffraction equation ##\lambda = d \sin \theta##. Solve it (rearrange it) to get a new equation ##\theta = \cdots##.

Now, using your numbers, you actually have two of these equations: ##\theta_1 = \cdots## and ##\theta_2 = \cdots##. Subtract one from the other to get ##\theta_2 - \theta_1 = \cdots## with ##d## somewhere on the right-hand side.
 
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