An Amici prism
Prism segmentation of a double Amici prism
An Amici prism, with a graphical ray tracing method
A compact fluorescent lamp seen through an Amici prism

An Amici prism, named for the astronomer Giovanni Battista Amici, is a type of compound dispersive prism used in spectrometers. The Amici prism consists of two triangular prisms in contact, with the first typically being made from a medium-dispersion crown glass, and the second from a higher-dispersion flint glass. Light entering the first prism is refracted at the first air–glass interface, refracted again at the interface between the two prisms, and then exits the second prism at near-normal incidence. The prism angles and materials are chosen such that one wavelength (colour) of light, the centre wavelength, exits the prism parallel to (but offset from) the entrance beam. The prism assembly is thus a direct-vision prism and is commonly used as such in hand-held spectroscopes. Other wavelengths are deflected at angles depending on the glass dispersion of the materials. Looking at a light source through the prism thus shows the optical spectrum of the source.

By 1860, Amici realized that one can join this type of prism back-to-back with a reflected copy of itself, producing a three-prism arrangement known as a double Amici prism.[1][2] This doubling of the original prism increases the angular dispersion of the assembly and also has the useful property that the centre wavelength is refracted back into the direct line of the entrance beam. The exiting ray of the center wavelength is thus not only undeviated from the incident ray, but also experiences no translation (i.e. transverse displacement or offset) away from the incident ray's path.

Amici himself never published about his nondeviating prism, but rather communicated the idea to his friend Donati, who constructed the device for observations of stellar spectra.[3] Donati's publications of his observations (in 1862) were the first disclosure of the prism doubling idea, and because the prism was practical to build and much more compact than multiple-prism arrangements typical in that period for producing high spectral dispersion, Amici's invention quickly caught the attention of researchers throughout Europe. The dispersion of Amici prisms can be accurately calculated using the multiple-prism dispersion theory assuming no spatial separation between the prism components.[4]

The dispersive Amici prism should not be confused with the non-dispersive Amici roof prism.

References

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  1. ^ G. B. Donati, ""Intorno alle strie degli spettri stellari (On lines in stellar spectra)", Il Nuovo Cimento 15: 292–304 (1862).
  2. ^ G. B. Donati, "Intorno alle strie degli spettri stellari (On lines in stellar spectra)," Annali del Reale Museo di Fisica e Storia Naturale di Firenze 1: 1–20 (1866).
  3. ^ N. Hagen and T. S. Tkaczyk, "Compound prism design principles, I", Appl. Opt. 50: 4998–5011 (2011).
  4. ^ F. J. Duarte, "Tunable laser optics: applications to optics and quantum optics", Progress in Quantum Electronics 37, 326–347 (2013).

📚 Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

Amici roof prism

An Amici roof prism, named for its inventor, the Italian astronomer Giovanni Battista Amici, is a type of reflecting prism used to deviate a beam of light

Star diagonal

diagonal is preferred over a prism. A prism diagonal uses a simple 90°-angle prism, pentaprism, or an Amici roof prism rather than a mirror to bend the

Giovanni Battista Amici

dipleidoscope and also the direct vision prism. The Amici prism, made of three prisms used in spectroscopy, and the Amici-Bertrand lens are named after him.

Amici

friends" Amici (crater), on the Moon Amici Forever, a band Amici prism, a type of compound dispersive prism used in spectrometers Amici roof prism, a type

Prism (optics)

Abbe prism Amici prism and other types of compound prisms Féry prism Grism, a dispersive prism with a diffraction grating on its surface Littrow prism with

Dispersive prism

makes a prism a useful substitute for a mirror in some situations. Triangular prism Amici prism and other types of compound prisms Littrow prism with mirror

Roof prism

simplest roof prism is the Amici roof prism, with other common roof prism designs being the Abbe–Koenig prism, the Schmidt–Pechan prism and probably the

Compound prism

approximation. While the doublet prism is the simplest compound prism type, the double-Amici prism is much more common. This prism is a three-element system