Ygggdrasil said:
Thanks! This is a really interesting problem, but...
Ivan Samsonov said:
What I wanted is to see a spectrum of a chemical and recognise the chemical from the emitted/absorbed lines.
I don't think I could do what you are talking about.
Emission lines are easy, if you're just using light bulbs. (Black compact fluorescents are the most fun.)
But absorption lines from a random chemical? Um, not in a hundred years could I do that.
And emission lines from a random chemical? That would require either burning the chemical or heating it up to astronomical temperatures. This is also beyond my capabilities.
Well, ok, I could burn the chemicals, but I might burn my house down in the process, so I'm not going to try it.
ps. Here are the comparative results of my experiment I just finished a few minutes ago:
Equipment:
Light source: black compact fluorescent lamp (mercury vapor)
plastic prism
1000 lines/mm diffraction grating
mercury vapor emission lines through the prism
mercury vapor emission lines via diffraction grating
My prism wasn't able to cast enough light onto a white screen, so I was forced to photograph it directly at the prism, losing two of my spectral lines. And the ones that are present, are not very well defined.
If you look through wiki's entry on the history of spectroscopy,
Early 19th Century (1800 - 1829)
In 1802, William Hyde Wollaston built a spectrometer, improving on Newton's model, that included a lens to focus the Sun’s spectrum on a screen. Upon use, Wollaston realized that the colors were not spread uniformly, but instead had missing patches of colors, which appeared as dark bands in the sun's spectrum. At the time, Wollaston believed these lines to be natural boundaries between the colors, but this hypothesis was later ruled out in 1815 by Fraunhofer's work.
Joseph von Fraunhofer made a significant experimental leap forward by replacing a prism with a diffraction grating as the source of wavelength dispersion.
you'll see that technologically, prisms were inferior to diffraction grating. So I would be surprised if anyone could do what you are asking, with even the best spectrums in the world.
This is just a guess of course, as I'm not really a scientist.
@Andy Resnick , any comments?