Concept

Monochromatic radiation

Summary
In physics, monochromatic radiation is electromagnetic radiation with a single constant frequency. When that frequency is part of the visible spectrum (or near it) the term monochromatic light is often used. Monochromatic light is perceived by the human eye as a spectral color. When monochromatic radiation propagates through vacuum or a homogeneous transparent medium, it has a single constant wavelength. No radiation can be totally monochromatic, since that would require a wave of infinite duration as a consequence of the Fourier transform's localization property (cf. spectral coherence). In practice, "monochromatic" radiation — even from lasers or spectral lines — always consists of components with a range of frequencies of non-zero width. Monochromatic radiation can be produced by a number of methods. Isaac Newton observed that a beam of light from the sun could be spread out by refraction into a fan of light with varying colors; and that if a beam of any particular color was isolated from that fan, it behaved as "pure" light that could not be decomposed further. When atoms of a chemical element in gaseous state are subjected to an electric current, to suitable radiation, or to high enough temperature, they emit a light spectrum with a set of discrete spectral lines (monochromatic components), that are characteristic of the element. This phenomenon is the basis of the science of spectroscopy, and is exploited in fluorescent lamps and the so-called neon signs. A laser is a device that generates monochromatic and coherent radiation through a process of stimulated emission. When monochromatic radiation is made to interfere with itself, the result can be visible and stable interference fringes that can be used to measure very small distances, or large distances with very high accuracy. The current definition of the metre is based on this technique. In the technique of spectroscopic analysis, a material sample is exposed to monochromatic radiation, and the amount that is absorbed is measured.
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