Diffraction

From Galactic Library
Revision as of 13:53, 27 September 2021 by Lwcamp (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

When starting out thinking about lasers, a lot of people think that they just go in a perfectly straight line forever. But no, physics is not as permissive as that. Light is a kind of wave, a wave made up of electric and magnetic fields but a wave nonetheless. And when waves encounter an obstacle, they can bend around the obstacle. Think of ripples in a still pond encountering a reed poking up through the water - the reed doesn’t cast a perfect shadow behind it. No, those ripples bend around and fill in the space behind the reed as well. In a similar way, if the ripples hit a wall with a hole in it, the ripples that go through the hole won’t march on in a perfectly straight column. Rather, they spread out as soon as they go through the hole. This bending and spreading out is called diffraction. Diffraction is a fundamental property of any wave in nature.

The smaller the wavelength of a wave in comparison to the size of the obstruction or opening, or the width of the beam, the less the wave diffracts. Since visible light has a very small wavelength, this is why light seems to travel in straight lines. It takes very narrow objects, such as hairs or thin scratches, to get noticeable diffraction. This is easy to demonstrate with a laser pointer in a darkened room. Shine the beam at a wall. Now put a hair in the beam. You will see a streak appear on the wall through the laser dot perpendicular to the hair. The streak is the light diffracting around the hair.

For a laser, we need to shine our beam on something. But as soon as the laser gets out of the machine that is making it and guiding it, it diffracts around the aperture that emits the beam into the wider world. This diffraction limits the amount by which the laser can be focused, or even by which it can move straight. This means that if you try to focus the beam down to a tiny point at a distant target, the beam might spread out to a much larger spot by the time it gets there. The amount the beam expands depends on the ratio of the initial width of the beam to the wavelength of the beam. In fact, we can determine the smallest possible spot size into which you can focus the beam: if we denote the diameter of the mirror, lens, or other opening in the laser or focusing element as , the wavelength of the light as , and the distance to the target as , then the diameter of the smallest spot, , is given by

.