In 1802, a scientist called W.H. Wollaston noticed that the visible
spectrum from the Sun had several dark lines in it. Not long afterwards, Joseph
von Fraunhofer built the first spectrometer. This focused sunlight from a small
telescope onto a narrow slit. The light then passed through a prism, which
produced the spectrum. Fraunhofer later invented the diffraction grating, which is used in most spectrometers today. Fraunhofer not only
confirmed Wollaston's results, but also found that there were far more dark
lines in the spectrum than Wollaston had suspected. Fraunhofer showed
that these were a feature of sunlight and not an illusion nor an optical
effect, and he labelled them with letters of the alphabet (A,B,C etc.). We now
call these dark lines Fraunhofer lines.
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