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Understanding diffraction grating behavior: including conical diffraction and Rayleigh anomalies from transmission gratings

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OPTICAL ENGINEERING
卷 58, 期 8, 页码 -

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SPIE-SOC PHOTO-OPTICAL INSTRUMENTATION ENGINEERS
DOI: 10.1117/1.OE.58.8.087105

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paraxial and nonparaxial diffraction grating behavior; conical diffraction in direction cosine space; Rayleigh (Wood's) anomalies from sinusoidal and square-wave amplitude gratings

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With the wide-spread availability of rigorous electromagnetic (vector) analysis codes for describing the diffraction of electromagnetic waves by specific periodic grating structures, the insight and understanding of nonparaxial parametric diffraction grating behavior afforded by approximate methods (i.e., scalar diffraction theory) is being ignored in the education of most optical engineers today. Elementary diffraction grating behavior is reviewed, the importance of maintaining consistency in the sign convention for the planar diffraction grating equation is emphasized, and the advantages of discussing conical diffraction grating behavior in terms of the direction cosines of the incident and diffracted angles are demonstrated. Paraxial grating behavior for coarse gratings (d >> gamma) is then derived and displayed graphically for five elementary grating types: sinusoidal amplitude gratings, square-wave amplitude gratings, sinusoidal phase gratings, square-wave phase gratings, and classical blazed gratings. Paraxial diffraction efficiencies are calculated, tabulated, and compared for these five elementary grating types. Since much of the grating community erroneously believes that scalar diffraction theory is only valid in the paraxial regime, the recently developed linear systems formulation of nonparaxial scalar diffraction theory is briefly reviewed, then used to predict the nonparaxial behavior (for transverse electric polarization) of both the sinusoidal and the square-wave amplitude gratings when the +1 diffracted order is maintained in the Littrow condition. This nonparaxial behavior includes the well-known Rayleigh (Wood's) anomaly effects that are usually thought to only be predicted by rigorous (vector) electromagnetic theory. (C) The Authors. Published by SPIE under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Unported License. Distribution or reproduction of this work in whole or in part requires full attribution of the original publication, including its DOI.

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