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grating monochromator

  • Images (2)

grating monochromator

Date: circa 1970
Inventory Number: 1999-1-0088
Classification: Monochromator
Subject:
optics, biology,
Maker: Bausch & Lomb Optical Company (1853-present)
User: J. Woodland Hastings (1927 - 2014)
Cultural Region:
United States,
Place of Origin:
Rochester,
City of Use:
Cambridge,
Dimensions:
48.2 x 62.2 x 23.3 cm (19 x 24 1/2 x 9 3/16 in.)
Material:
stainless steel,
Description:
This grating monochromator is brown, made of metal, and trapezoidal in shape. It has three silver knobs - drum micrometers - which can be used to manually adjust various settings. The knob on top is likely used to adjust wavelength and the knobs on the sides of the object (marked in milimeters) are likely used to adjust slit openings. On the left side of the object, there is an entrance slit which can be opened to admit light into the instrument. Underneath the entrace slit, there is a rectangular plate with three screws (to install a platform). On the front face, there is a black round exit slit. Below the exit slit, there is a rectangular plate with three holes in it (also to install a platform). The two feet at one end of the instrument can set it at an angle.
Signedrectangular plate on the front of the instrument: BAUSCH & LOMB / OPTICAL CO. / ROCHESTER / N.Y. U.S.A. / MODEL NO. DD3738
FunctionA monochromator is an optical device that selects a narrow band of wavelengths

of light (or any other radiation depending on the instrument) chosen from a wider

range of wavelengths available at the input.

A grating monochromator, in addition to an entrance slit, an exit slit, and internal optics, contains a mirrored dispersion element called a grating that transmits or reflects light inside of the instrument. After light enters through the entrance slit, the grating disperses the wavelengths, which allows a particular wavelength of choice to exit through the slit.

This particular instrument was used by Professor Woodland Hastings to record

the emission spectral output of dinoflagellates' bioluminescence, or the light

emissions of unicellular protists. This monochromator is "blazed in red," which

means that the grating was adjusted to select red wavelengths of light from a

polychromatic spectrum.
Historical AttributesUsed by Prof. Woodland Hastings lab to record the emission spectral output of dinoflagellates' bioluminescence. This monochromator is blazed in the red.
Curatorial RemarksA similar grating monochromator has a platform that can be screwed into the hole underneath the exit slit (1999-1-0089).
ProvenanceThis object came from the laboratory of J. Woodland Hastings Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Harvard University.
Related WorksFor a short explanation of monochromators, see this document.

Lars Olof Bjorn's textbook Photobiology: The Science of Light and Life addresses the mechanics of the grating monochromator.

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