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Through the Spectrum

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Spectroscopy is moving in extraordinary directions. More than ever before, it is bringing us deeper into biomedicine, to the far reaches of the universe, and into a growing number of innovative devices and applications. In this special section, spectroscopy takes center stage as we explore its increasingly significant role in the future of photonics.

1666 Sir Isaac Newton discovers that the sun’s white light could be dispersed into a continuous series of colors using an instrument he invented — now called the spectroscope — essentially beginning the science of spectroscopy. In the early 1800s, German physicist Joseph von Fraunhofer found that when sufficiently dispersed, the sun’s spectrum is crossed by many fine, dark lines; these are now known as Fraunhofer lines. He later developed diffraction grating and the spectrometer. Joseph von Fraunhofer. Photo courtesy of The Fraunhofer Society. 1860...Read full article

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    Published: February 2016
    Glossary
    spectroscope
    In a general sense, any one of a class of instruments used to disperse radiation, visible or invisible, into its component wavelengths and for determining or measuring the resultant spectrum. In a limited sense, the instrument is capable of being used only for visual observation of the spectrum.
    FeaturesSir Isaac NewtonspectroscopespectroscopyJoseph von FraunhoferAnders Jonas ÅngströmCharles Hard TownesLasersImaging

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