The Public Lab spectrometry project is an open source community effort to develop low-cost spectrometers for a range of purposes. All open spectrometry hardware and software efforts are welcome here! **Join in by:** * Learning [what spectrometry is](#Whats+spectrometry) * Reading about goals and [asking great questions](#Frequently+Asked+Questions) * Building a basic spectrometer using [one of our starter kits](#Starter+Kits) * Trying (and critiquing) our [community-made how-to guides](#Activities) and posting your own * Building on others’ work; hack and remix the kits to refine and expand them * [Share your upgrades](#Upgrades) for others to try -- and perhaps for inclusion in an upcoming starter kit release or add-on kit **** ## Starter Kits Public Lab’s Kits initiative offers several starter kits, including many of the basic components, and instructions for constructing a basic visible light spectrometer. The point of the kits is to provide a shared reference design for building experimental setups onto. Lego Spectrometer Kit Our most recent kit, incorporating community improvements while balancing low cost and ease of construction. Choose between webcam and Raspberry Pi camera versions and build attachments width standard Lego connectors. Build one Buy one Papercraft Spectrometry Intro Kit A $9 paper spectrometer which you can attach to a smartphone or webcam. It’s made of paper to reduce cost and complexity, and is mainly intended as an “introductory” or educational kit. The flat design can be printed on a laser printer or photocopied to make more. Build one Buy one **** ## Activities This is a list of community-generated guides for specific applications using your spectrometry setup (either a [starter kit](#Starter+Kits) or a [modded design](#Upgrades)). These [activities can be categorized](https://publiclab.org/wiki/activity-categories), and some may be more reproduced -- or reproducible -- than others. Try them out to build your skills, and help improve them by leaving comments. Together, we can repeat and refine the activities into experiments. > **Note:** If you are working on an **urgent issue** such as a threat to your or someone else’s health, please know that these techniques may not be ready for your use; it's possible that they never will be. [Read more here](/notes/gretchengehrke/09-29-2016/common-low-cost-technique-limitations) ### Activity grid [activities:spectrometry] **** ## Upgrades Have you added to your starter kit, improved it, or redesigned it? Show others how to take it to the next level by posting a build guide here: [upgrades:spectrometry] Add your upgrade guide here Request or propose an upgrade _Mods should include a parts list and a step-by-step construction guide with photo documentation. See an example._ **** ## Challenges We're working to refine and improve DIY spectrometry on a number of fronts; here, take a look at the leading challenges we're hoping to solve, and post your own. For now, we're using the Q&A feature, so just click "Ask a question" to post your own challenge. Be sure to add: * constraints: expense, complexity * goals: performance, use cases [questions:spectrometry-challenge] **** ## Builds There’s a lot going on in open source spectrometry -- if you’ve developed another open source design you’d like to show others how to construct, post it here! * [RamanPi](https://hackaday.io/project/1279-ramanpi-raman-spectrometer) * [Hackteria “drop”-style spectrometers](https://publiclab.org/notes/gaudi/04-03-2014/diy-micro-volume-spectrophotometer) / [DIY NanoDrop on Hackteria.org](http://hackteria.org/wiki/index.php/DIY_NanoDrop) * _Add yours here_ ##What's spectrometry? Colored light is often a blend of different colors. A spectrometer is a device which splits those colors apart, like a prism, and measures the strength of each color. A typical output of a spectrometer looks like this spectrum of the daytime sky, with the actual light spectrum at the top and the graph of wavelength (horizontal axis, in nanometers of wavelength) and intensity (vertical axis) below: [![sky.png](https://i.publiclab.org/system/images/photos/000/005/455/original/sky.png)](https://spectralworkbench.org/analyze/spectrum/19882) > Needed: overview of spectra, calibration, units, comparison, and fluorescence/absorption. Please edit this page or link to a resource, potentially [the Wikipedia page](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spectroscopy), although that's quite full of technical jargon. ## Software Spectral data can be analyzed with https://spectralworkbench.org to create spectra plots, find centers of emissions plots, and find similar spectra. Data also can be exported in various formats (JSON, CSV, XML) for further analysis and visualization. ## How does this compare to a lab instrument? The [Desktop Spectrometry Starter Kit](/wiki/desktop-spectrometry-kit-3-0) is only one part in an experimental setup, and the following shows where it fits in an overall diagram of a lab spectrometric setup: [![tmp_31873-IMG_20161027_101601_2-79757779.jpg](https://publiclab.org/system/images/photos/000/018/635/large/tmp_31873-IMG_20161027_101601_2-79757779.jpg)](https://publiclab.org/system/images/photos/000/018/635/original/tmp_31873-IMG_20161027_101601_2-79757779.jpg) [![tmp_31873-IMG_20161027_095939_2-108076392.jpg](https://publiclab.org/system/images/photos/000/018/636/large/tmp_31873-IMG_20161027_095939_2-108076392.jpg)](https://publiclab.org/system/images/photos/000/018/636/original/tmp_31873-IMG_20161027_095939_2-108076392.jpg) There are many, many different types of spectrometry and spectrometers -- many don’t even measure light. Even among those that do, some detect light in the ultraviolet range, and others in the infrared range of light. The range of Public Lab spectrometers depends on the range of the commercially available cameras we attach them to (~400-700 nanometer wavelengths). A commercially available product with a slightly wider range (from 335 to 1000 nanometers) is [available from Cole Parmer](http://www.coleparmer.com/Product/Cole_Parmer_Visible_spectrophotometer_335_to_1000_nm_wavelength_range_analog_output/UX-83055-10). **** ## Frequently Asked Questions [questions:spectrometry] Note our previous Frequently Asked Questions page, which [can be found here »](/wiki/spectrometer-faq) -- please help port these into the new system, here!...
Author | Comment | Last activity | Moderation | ||
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abdul | "Hello bsugar, The DSK 3.0 is made of paper. The paper is, without getting technical, slightly more rigid and slightly thicker than a greeting card..." | Read more » | over 8 years ago | |||
warren | "(Moving my comment to an "answer" -- would you mind accepting this so it's marked as resolved?) Hi! You can calibrate after you have taken a spect..." | Read more » | over 8 years ago | |||
warren | "Yes, the live capture has been limited to 640px wide, but some work has been done to resolve this -- it just hasn't been finished. You can find the..." | Read more » | over 8 years ago | |||
sylvainbonhommeau | "Hi all, following these comments, I found this article which describes what would be the project of a spectrometer onboard a drone, but replacing t..." | Read more » | over 8 years ago | |||
stoft | "Jeff, Those are really two different questions. 1) Measuring instrument resolution: A) Could use a single, narrow BW laser (if that BW is known to..." | Read more » | over 8 years ago | |||
warren | "Yes! At https://spectralworkbench.org/upload. Also JSON format. " | Read more » | over 8 years ago | |||
dhaffnersr | "Hey @shubham, this may help you out also: Non linearity in the photon transfer curve of back-illuminated CCDs has been reported by the authors in p..." | Read more » | over 8 years ago | |||
dhaffnersr | "Hey @shubham, first lets start with what your two spectra look like, I'm not sure what the transparent sheet is for, other than a filter or a mediu..." | Read more » | over 8 years ago | |||
shubham | "Do you think we need to fix the offset of magnitude 1 before division operator? i.e, the values of the spectra should begin from 0 rather than 1. " | Read more » | over 8 years ago | |||
cfastie | " " | Read more » | over 8 years ago | |||
cfastie | " " | Read more » | over 8 years ago | |||
cfastie | "Sorry, I am getting strange behavior from the interface. " | Read more » | over 8 years ago | |||
warren | "Hi, Andrew -- if this worked for you, could you mark this answer "Accepted"? This is a new feature on the site! Thanks. " | Read more » | over 8 years ago | |||
cfastie | "Yes it does. " | Read more » | over 8 years ago | |||
cfastie | "Does this comment box work? " | Read more » | over 8 years ago | |||
cfastie | "I agree with Jeff that those results seem to suggest that whatever full spectrum source is used the same general spectral response is found (more b..." | Read more » | over 8 years ago | |||
cfastie | "I agree with Jeff that those results seem to suggest that whatever full spectrum source is used the same general spectral response is found (more b..." | Read more » | over 8 years ago | |||
cfastie | "I agree with Jeff that those results seem to suggest that whatever full spectrum source is used the same general spectral response is found (more b..." | Read more » | over 8 years ago | |||
warren | "Hi, CCDs do not have a linear response curve -- they detect some colors (like those in the green range) more than others. So to get a flat line, yo..." | Read more » | over 8 years ago | |||
warren | "There's now been a lot of work on this via WebValley and @cristoforetti -- take a look at #webvalley posts, and we managed to get it working! " | Read more » | over 8 years ago | |||
warren | "the slit-based PLab design does not provide the optical characteristics of field of view like the lens on a camera (and I'm not aware of any analog..." | Read more » | over 8 years ago | |||
sylvainbonhommeau | "hi, thanks for all your answer! sorry for the incomplete description of the experiment. Basically, we need the light spectrum for each pixel. I saw..." | Read more » | over 8 years ago | |||
stoft | "However ....... 1) the slit-based PLab design does not provide the optical characteristics of field of view like the lens on a camera (and I'm not ..." | Read more » | over 8 years ago | |||
warren | "The new SpectralWorkbench.js library can (in Node.js javascript) convert a spectrum image file to a spectrum JSON or CSV file, so perhaps that's a ..." | Read more » | over 8 years ago |