| Diffraction is the apparent bending and spreading of waves when they meet an
obstruction. It can occur with any type of wave, including sound waves, water waves, and electromagnetic waves such as light and radio waves. Diffraction also occurs when any group of waves of a finite size is
propagating; for example, a narrow beam of light waves from a laser must, because of diffraction of the beam, eventually diverge into a wider beam at a sufficient distance
from the laser. As a simple example of diffraction, if you speak into one end of a cardboard tube, the sound waves emerging from
the other end spread out in all directions, rather than propagating in a straight line like a stream of water from a garden
hose.
Diffraction is one particular type of wave interference. All diffraction
occurs because of interference, but not all interference is diffraction. For example, sound waves emitted by two stereo speakers
will interfere with each other if they are of the same frequency and have a definite phase relationship, but this is not
diffraction. Diffraction is the specific type of interference caused by the partial obstruction or lateral restriction of a wave.
Because diffraction is an interference effect, diffraction will not occur if the wave is not coherent, and diffraction effects become weaker (and ultimately
undetectable) as the size of obstruction is made larger and larger compared to the wavelength.
Diffraction is not the same as refraction, although both are phenomena in
which a wave does not propagate in a single direction. Refraction is not an interference phenomenon, and, e.g., can occur without
coherence.
It is the diffraction of "particles," such as electrons, which stood as one of the powerful arguments in favor of quantum mechanics. It is possible, due to wave-particle duality, to observe diffraction of particles such
as neutrons or electrons. As the
wavelengths of these particle-waves are so small they can be used as probes of the atomic structure of crystals. See electron diffraction and neutron diffraction.
The most conceptually simple example of diffraction is double-slit diffraction in which both slits have relatively narrow
widths compared to the wavelength of the wave. Suppose, for the sake of
visualization, that these are water waves. After passing through the slits, two overlapping patterns of semicircular ripples are
formed, as shown in the first figure. Where a crest overlaps with a crest, a double-height crest will be formed; this is
constructive interference. Constructive interference also occurs where a
trough overlaps another trough. However, when a trough and a crest overlap, they cancel out; the interference is destructive. The
second figure shows the result of this process with light waves of a single wavelength originating from a laser. The
constructive-interference locations are called maxima, because they have maximum brightness. The destructive-interference
locations are the minima. Historically, the first proof that light was a wave phenomenon came from the double-slit experiment of Thomas Young.
General Facts About Diffraction
Several qualitative observations can be made:
- When the dimensions of the diffracting object are reduced, the angular spacing of the diffraction pattern is increased in
inverse proportion. (More precisely, this is true of the sines of the angles.)
- The diffraction angles are invariant under scaling; that is, they depend only on the ratio of the wavelength to a dimension,
a, of the diffracting object.
- When the diffracting object is repeated, the effect is to narrow each maximum, concentrating its energy within a narrower
range of angles. The third figure, for example, shows a comparison of a double-slit pattern with a pattern formed by five slits,
both sets of slits having the same spacing, a, between the center of one slit and the next.
Mathematical Treatment
It is mathematically easier to consider the case of far-field or Fraunhofer diffraction, where the diffracting obstruction is many wavelengths distant from the point
at which the wave is measured. The more general case is known as near-field or Fresnel diffraction, and
involves more complex mathematics. As the observation distance is increased the results predicted by the Fresnel theory converge
towards those predicted by the simpler Fraunhofer theory. This article considers far-field diffraction, which is commonly
observed in nature.
Quantitatively, the angular positions of the minima in multiple-slit diffraction are given by the equation

where m is an integer that labels the order of each minimum. The
central maximum is two orders wide, however, so m = 0, θ = 0 is the absolute maximum of the distribution and
intensity functions. This is a form of Bragg's law (see below).
Quantitative Analysis of Single-Slit Diffraction
As an example, we will now derive an exact equation for the intensity of the diffraction pattern as a function of angle in the
case of single-slit diffraction.
We will start with a mathematical representation of Huygens'
principle. Consider monochromatic plane waves of wavelength λ incident on a slit of width a. The formula for a
wave ψ, traveling radially in the r direction, is given by:

Let the slit lie in the x′-y′ plane, with its center at the origin; let (x′,y′,0) be a point inside
the slit over which we are integrating; and let (x,0,z) be the location at which we are computing the intensity of the
diffraction pattern. The slit extends from x′=-a/2 to +a/2, and from to . Then:


We assume Fraunhofer diffraction, so that
. In
other words, the distance to the target is much larger than the diffraction width on the target. By the binomial expansion rule, ignoring terms quadratic and higher, we can
estimate our quantity on the right to be:


We see that our 1/r in front of the equation is non-oscillatory, i.e. its contribution to the magnitude of the intensity is
small compared to our exponential factors. Therefore, we will lose little accuracy by approximating it as z.
To make things cleaner, we will use a placeholder 'C' to denote constants in our equation. It is important to keep in mind that C
can contain imaginary numbers, thus our wave function will be imaginary, however at the end, we will bracket our ψ, which
will eliminate any imaginary components.
Now, in Fraunhoffer diffraction, is
small, so . The
same approximation holds for .
Thus, taking , we have:
Now we note that
and .

Now, substituting in , the
intensity I of the diffracted waves at an angle θ is given by:
where the sinc function is given by sinc(x) = sin(x)/x.
Quantitative Analysis of N-Slit Diffraction
Let us again start with the mathematical representation of Huygens' principle.

Consider n slits in the prime plane of the equal size (a, , 0) and spacing d spread along the x′ axis. As above, the distance r for the slit 1 is:

To generalize this to n slits, we make the observation that while z and y remain constant, x′ shifts by

Thus

and the sum of all n contributions to the the wave function is:
Again noting that is small, so , we have:
Now, we can use the following identity

Substituting into our equation, we find:
We now make our k substitution as before and represent all non-oscillating constants by the I0 variable as in the 1 slit diffraction and bracket the result. Remember that

This allows us to discard the tailing exponent and we have our answer:
![\left[\frac{\sin\left(\frac{N\pi d}{\lambda}\sin\theta\right)}{\sin\left(\frac{\pi d}{\lambda}\sin\theta\right)}\right]^2](/math/b94db2b8b42b3cf8c0fcfb29e4eb6cc1.png)
Other Cases
Bragg Diffraction
Diffraction from multiple slits, as described above, is similar to what occurs when waves are scattered from a periodic
structure, such as atoms in a crystal or rulings on a diffraction grating. Each scattering center (e.g., each atom) acts as
a point source of spherical wavefronts; these wavefronts undergo constructive interference to form a number of diffracted beams. The direction of these beams is described by Bragg's
law:

where λ is the wavelength, d is the distance between scattering
centers, θ is the angle of diffraction and m is an integer known as the order of the diffracted beam.
Bragg diffraction is used in X-ray crystallography to deduce the structure of a crystal from the angles at which X-rays are
diffracted from it. Since the diffraction angle θ is dependent on the wavelength λ, diffaction gratings impart angular
dispersion on a beam of light.
The most common demonstration of Bragg diffraction is the spectrum of colors seen reflected from a compact disc: the closely-spaced tracks on the surface of the disc form a
diffraction grating, and the individual wavelengths of white light are diffracted at different angles from it, in accordance with
Bragg's law.
Additional Forms of Diffraction
For diffraction through a circular aperture, there is a series of concentric rings surrounding a central Airy disc. The mathematical result is similar to a radially symmetric version of the
equation given above in the case of single-slit diffraction.
A wave does not have to pass through an aperture to diffract; for example, a beam of light of a finite size also undergoes
diffraction and spreads in diameter. This effect limits the minimum size d of spot of light formed at the focus of a
lens, known as the diffraction limit:

where λ is the wavelength of the light, f is the focal length of the lens, and a is the diameter of the
beam of light, or (if the beam is filling the lens) the diameter of the lens. (See Rayleigh criterion).
By use of Huygens' principle, it is possible to compute
the diffraction pattern of a wave from any arbitrarily shaped aperture. If the pattern is observed at a sufficient distance from
the aperture, it will appear as the two-dimensional Fourier
transform of the function representing the aperture.
See also:
External links
- 2-D wave java
applet (http://www.falstad.com/wave2d/) displays diffraction patterns of
various slit configurations.
- Diffraction java
applet (http://www.falstad.com/diffraction/) displays diffraction patterns of
various 2-D apertures.
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