In our museum collections is a small leather wallet with what first appears to be a piece of clear framed glass inside. It doesn’t look like much, but this is actually a diffraction grid – used to separate light into it’s component wavelengths – think something along the lines of Pink Floyd’s Dark Side of the Moon album cover.
They work by having thousands of tiny ruled lines etched into the surface allowing the light to bounce off dramatically. They are used in a lot of different fields – including light analysis and laser optics.

One Diffraction Grating in our Collections
Our particular grating is from the early 1900s and has 14,400 lines per inch meaning we get a stunning display of rainbows when light is viewed through it. Volunteer Angharad @amjones_art and I took the opportunity of some early March sunshine to walk around campus and take photographs through the lens on a smartphone – the results speak for themselves!

The Tower Building

Geddes Quadrangle

Sundial at Geddes Quadrangle

The Carnegie Building

Staircase – Tower Building

Back of the Library – Can you spot the four Magpies on the Tree?

Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art and Design – Floor Six

Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art and Design – Floor Five Crawford Building Statue

Walkway from Matthew to Crawford Building – Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art and Design

Of course we had to finish with Museum Services!