Littrow Expansion
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Littrow expansion and its counterpart Littrow compression are optical effects associated with slitless imaging
spectrograph An optical spectrometer (spectrophotometer, spectrograph or spectroscope) is an instrument used to measure properties of light over a specific portion of the electromagnetic spectrum, typically used in spectroscopic analysis to identify mate ...
s. These effects are named after
Austria Austria, formally the Republic of Austria, is a landlocked country in Central Europe, lying in the Eastern Alps. It is a federation of nine Federal states of Austria, states, of which the capital Vienna is the List of largest cities in Aust ...
n physicist Otto von Littrow. In a slitless imaging spectrograph, light is focused with a conventional optical system, which includes a transmission or reflection grating as in a conventional spectrograph. This disperses the light, according to wavelength, in one direction; but no slit is interposed into the beam. For pointlike objects (such as distant stars) this results in a spectrum on the focal plane of the instrument for each imaged object. For distributed objects with emission-line spectra (such as the Sun in
extreme ultraviolet Extreme ultraviolet radiation (EUV or XUV) or high-energy ultraviolet radiation is electromagnetic radiation in the part of the electromagnetic spectrum spanning wavelengths shorter than the hydrogen Lyman-alpha line from 121  nm down to ...
), it results in an image of the object at each wavelength of interest, overlapping on the focal plane, as in a
spectroheliograph The spectroheliograph is an instrument used in astronomy which captures a photography, photographic image of the Sun at a single wavelength of light, a monochromatic image. The wavelength is usually chosen to coincide with a optical spectrum, spec ...
.


Description

The Littrow expansion/compression effect is an anamorphic distortion of single-wavelength image on the focal plane of the instrument, due to a geometric effect surrounding reflection or transmission at the grating. In particular, the angle of incidence \theta_i and reflection \theta_r from a flat mirror, measured from the direction normal to the mirror, have the relation : \theta_r = -\theta_i, which implies : \frac = -1, so that an image encoded in the angle of collimated light is reversed but not distorted by the reflection. In a spectrograph, the angle of reflection in the dispersed direction depends in a more complicated way on the angle of incidence: : \theta_r = -\arcsin\big( \sin(\theta_i) + n \lambda / D \big), where n is an integer and represents spectral order, \lambda is the wavelength of interest, and D is the line spacing of the grating. Because the
sine In mathematics, sine and cosine are trigonometric functions of an angle. The sine and cosine of an acute angle are defined in the context of a right triangle: for the specified angle, its sine is the ratio of the length of the side opposite th ...
function (and its inverse) are nonlinear, this in general means that : \frac \ne -1 for most values of n and \lambda/D, yielding anamorphic distortion of the spectral image at each wavelength. When the magnitude is larger, images are expanded in the spectral direction; when the magnitude is smaller, they are compressed. For the special case where : n \lambda / D = - 2 \sin(\theta_i), the reflected ray exits the grating exactly back along the incident ray, and d\theta_r/d\theta_i = 1; this is the Littrow configuration, and the specific angle for which this configuration holds is the Littrow angle. This configuration preserves the image aspect ratio in the reflected beam. All other incidence angles yield either Littrow expansion or Littrow compression of the collimated image.


References

{{reflist Spectroscopy