MarketGrism
Company Profile

Grism

A grism is a combination of a prism and grating arranged so that light at a chosen central wavelength passes straight through. The advantage of this arrangement is that one and the same camera can be used both for imaging and spectroscopy without having to be moved. Grisms are inserted into a camera beam that is already collimated. They then create a dispersed spectrum centered on the object's location in the camera's field of view.

History
The grating prism was first described in 1973 by Ira Sprague Bowen and Arthur H. Vaughan Jr. in a paper explaining an experiment using a "non-objective grating" located in the convergent beam of a telescope, which allowed to significantly reduce its off-axis aberrations. In 1997, this instrument was patented by Chungte W. Chen and Ernest W. Gossett (No 5,652,681), the name grism was chosen because of the combination grating-prism. ==See also==
tickerdossier.comtickerdossier.substack.com