Pi-based Spectrometer Gets An Upgrade

Here at Hackaday, we love to see projects re-visited and updated after weāve covered them on the site. Itās always exciting to see what the creators come up with next, and this Pi-Based Spectrometer project is a great example of that.
[LesWright] found himself with a problem when the new version of Raspberry Pi operating system was released (Bullseye), and it broke some functionality on his original software. Rather than just fix the issues, [Les] chose to rewrite the software more dramatically and has ended up with a much more capable spectrometer that is able to match professional devices costing many times more.

By using multi-wavelength calibration and polynomial regression data, the new version is much more accurate and can now resolve wavelengths down to +/- 1nm.
The whole project is now written in OpenCV, and thereās a nifty new waterfall spectrum display, that will show changes in measured spectra over time.
A low-cost benchtop spectroscope is coupled to a RaspberryPi Camera via a CCTV zoom lens and the whole setup is mounted to a small block of aluminium for thermal and mechanical stability. The spectroscope is pointed at a fluorescent lamp and the user is guided through a calibration routine to tune the software to the hardware.
Weāre impressed with the precision [Les] has achieved with his builds, and the write-up is sufficiently detailed to allow others to follow in his footsteps. Weād love to see if readers build one themselves, and what they use them for!
If you want to read up on the original build, you can find our article here. Weāve covered several spectrometry projects in the past, including this Gamma-Ray Spectrometer and this one based around an STM32 Nucleo board.
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