fbpx
Wikipedia

Airy disk

In optics, the Airy disk (or Airy disc) and Airy pattern are descriptions of the best-focused spot of light that a perfect lens with a circular aperture can make, limited by the diffraction of light. The Airy disk is of importance in physics, optics, and astronomy.

A computer-generated image of an Airy disk. The grayscale intensities have been adjusted to enhance the brightness of the outer rings of the Airy pattern.
A computer-generated Airy disk from diffracted white light (D65 spectrum). Note that the red component is diffracted more than the blue, so that the center appears slightly bluish.
A real Airy disk created by passing a red laser beam through a 90-micrometre pinhole aperture with 27 orders of diffraction
Airy disk captured by 2000 mm camera lens at f/25 aperture. Image size: 1×1 mm.

The diffraction pattern resulting from a uniformly illuminated, circular aperture has a bright central region, known as the Airy disk, which together with the series of concentric rings around is called the Airy pattern. Both are named after George Biddell Airy. The disk and rings phenomenon had been known prior to Airy; John Herschel described the appearance of a bright star seen through a telescope under high magnification for an 1828 article on light for the Encyclopedia Metropolitana:

...the star is then seen (in favourable circumstances of tranquil atmosphere, uniform temperature, etc.) as a perfectly round, well-defined planetary disc, surrounded by two, three, or more alternately dark and bright rings, which, if examined attentively, are seen to be slightly coloured at their borders. They succeed each other nearly at equal intervals round the central disc....[1]

Airy wrote the first full theoretical treatment explaining the phenomenon (his 1835 "On the Diffraction of an Object-glass with Circular Aperture").[2]

Mathematically, the diffraction pattern is characterized by the wavelength of light illuminating the circular aperture, and the aperture's size. The appearance of the diffraction pattern is additionally characterized by the sensitivity of the eye or other detector used to observe the pattern.

The most important application of this concept is in cameras, microscopes and telescopes. Due to diffraction, the smallest point to which a lens or mirror can focus a beam of light is the size of the Airy disk. Even if one were able to make a perfect lens, there is still a limit to the resolution of an image created by such a lens. An optical system in which the resolution is no longer limited by imperfections in the lenses but only by diffraction is said to be diffraction limited.

Size

Far from the aperture, the angle at which the first minimum occurs, measured from the direction of incoming light, is given by the approximate formula:

 

or, for small angles, simply

 

where θ is in radians, λ is the wavelength of the light in meters, and d is the diameter of the aperture in meters. The full width at half maximum is given by  .

Airy wrote this relation as

 

where s was the angle of first minimum in seconds of arc, a was the radius of the aperture in inches, and the wavelength of light was assumed to be 0.000022 inches (560 nm; the mean of visible wavelengths).[3] This is equal to the angular resolution of a circular aperture. The Rayleigh criterion for barely resolving two objects that are point sources of light, such as stars seen through a telescope, is that the center of the Airy disk for the first object occurs at the first minimum of the Airy disk of the second. This means that the angular resolution of a diffraction-limited system is given by the same formulae.

However, while the angle at which the first minimum occurs (which is sometimes described as the radius of the Airy disk) depends only on wavelength and aperture size, the appearance of the diffraction pattern will vary with the intensity (brightness) of the light source. Because any detector (eye, film, digital) used to observe the diffraction pattern can have an intensity threshold for detection, the full diffraction pattern may not be apparent. In astronomy, the outer rings are frequently not apparent even in a highly magnified image of a star. It may be that none of the rings are apparent, in which case the star image appears as a disk (central maximum only) rather than as a full diffraction pattern. Furthermore, fainter stars will appear as smaller disks than brighter stars, because less of their central maximum reaches the threshold of detection.[4] While in theory all stars or other "point sources" of a given wavelength and seen through a given aperture have the same Airy disk radius characterized by the above equation (and the same diffraction pattern size), differing only in intensity, the appearance is that fainter sources appear as smaller disks, and brighter sources appear as larger disks.[5] This was described by Airy in his original work:[6]

The rapid decrease of light in the successive rings will sufficiently explain the visibility of two or three rings with a very bright star and the non-visibility of rings with a faint star. The difference of the diameters of the central spots (or spurious disks) of different stars ... is also fully explained. Thus the radius of the spurious disk of a faint star, where light of less than half the intensity of the central light makes no impression on the eye, is determined by [s = 1.17/a], whereas the radius of the spurious disk of a bright star, where light of 1/10 the intensity of the central light is sensible, is determined by [s = 1.97/a].

Despite this feature of Airy's work, the radius of the Airy disk is often given as being simply the angle of first minimum, even in standard textbooks.[7] In reality, the angle of first minimum is a limiting value for the size of the Airy disk, and not a definite radius.

Examples

 
Log-log plot of aperture diameter vs angular resolution at the diffraction limit for various light wavelengths compared with various astronomical instruments. For example, the blue star shows that the Hubble Space Telescope is almost diffraction-limited in the visible spectrum at 0.1 arcsecs, whereas the red circle shows that the human eye should have a resolving power of 20 arcsecs in theory, though 20/20 vision resolves to only 60 arcsecs (1 arcminute)

Cameras

If two objects imaged by a camera are separated by an angle small enough that their Airy disks on the camera detector start overlapping, the objects cannot be clearly separated any more in the image, and they start blurring together. Two objects are said to be just resolved when the maximum of the first Airy pattern falls on top of the first minimum of the second Airy pattern (the Rayleigh criterion).

Therefore, the smallest angular separation two objects can have before they significantly blur together is given as stated above by

 

Thus, the ability of the system to resolve detail is limited by the ratio of λ/d. The larger the aperture for a given wavelength, the finer the detail that can be distinguished in the image.

This can also be expressed as

 

where   is the separation of the images of the two objects on the film, and   is the distance from the lens to the film. If we take the distance from the lens to the film to be approximately equal to the focal length of the lens, we find

 

but   is the f-number of a lens. A typical setting for use on an overcast day would be f/8 (see Sunny 16 rule). For violet, the shortest wavelength visible light, the wavelength λ is about 420 nanometers (see cone cells for sensitivity of S cone cells). This gives a value for   of about 4 µm. In a digital camera, making the pixels of the image sensor smaller than half this value (one pixel for each object, one for each space between) would not significantly increase the captured image resolution. However, it may improve the final image by over-sampling, allowing noise reduction.

The human eye

 
Longitudinal sections through a focused beam with (top) negative, (center) zero, and (bottom) positive spherical aberration. The lens is to the left.

The fastest f-number for the human eye is about 2.1,[8] corresponding to a diffraction-limited point spread function with approximately 1 μm diameter. However, at this f-number, spherical aberration limits visual acuity, while a 3 mm pupil diameter (f/5.7) approximates the resolution achieved by the human eye.[9] The maximum density of cones in the human fovea is approximately 170,000 per square millimeter,[10] which implies that the cone spacing in the human eye is about 2.5 μm, approximately the diameter of the point spread function at f/5.

Focused laser beam

A circular laser beam with uniform intensity across the circle (a flat-top beam) focused by a lens will form an Airy disk pattern at the focus. The size of the Airy disk determines the laser intensity at the focus.

Aiming sight

Some weapon aiming sights (e.g. FN FNC) require the user to align a peep sight (rear, nearby sight, i.e. which will be out of focus) with a tip (which should be focused and overlaid on the target) at the end of the barrel. When looking through the peep sight, the user will notice an Airy disk that will help center the sight over the pin.[11]

Conditions for observation

Light from a uniformly illuminated circular aperture (or from a uniform, flattop beam) will exhibit an Airy diffraction pattern far away from the aperture due to Fraunhofer diffraction (far-field diffraction).

The conditions for being in the far field and exhibiting an Airy pattern are: the incoming light illuminating the aperture is a plane wave (no phase variation across the aperture), the intensity is constant over the area of the aperture, and the distance   from the aperture where the diffracted light is observed (the screen distance) is large compared to the aperture size, and the radius   of the aperture is not too much larger than the wavelength   of the light. The last two conditions can be formally written as   .

In practice, the conditions for uniform illumination can be met by placing the source of the illumination far from the aperture. If the conditions for far field are not met (for example if the aperture is large), the far-field Airy diffraction pattern can also be obtained on a screen much closer to the aperture by using a lens right after the aperture (or the lens itself can form the aperture). The Airy pattern will then be formed at the focus of the lens rather than at infinity.

Hence, the focal spot of a uniform circular laser beam (a flattop beam) focused by a lens will also be an Airy pattern.

In a camera or imaging system an object far away gets imaged onto the film or detector plane by the objective lens, and the far field diffraction pattern is observed at the detector. The resulting image is a convolution of the ideal image with the Airy diffraction pattern due to diffraction from the iris aperture or due to the finite size of the lens. This leads to the finite resolution of a lens system described above.

Mathematical formulation

 
Diffraction from a circular aperture. The Airy pattern is observable when   (i.e. in the far field)
 
Diffraction from an aperture with a lens. The far field image will (only) be formed at the screen one focal length away, where R=f (f=focal length). The observation angle   stays the same as in the lensless case.

The intensity of the Airy pattern follows the Fraunhofer diffraction pattern of a circular aperture, given by the squared modulus of the Fourier transform of the circular aperture:

 

where   is the maximum intensity of the pattern at the Airy disc center,   is the Bessel function of the first kind of order one,   is the wavenumber,   is the radius of the aperture, and   is the angle of observation, i.e. the angle between the axis of the circular aperture and the line between aperture center and observation point.  , where q is the radial distance from the observation point to the optical axis and R is its distance to the aperture. Note that the Airy disk as given by the above expression is only valid for large R, where Fraunhofer diffraction applies; calculation of the shadow in the near-field must rather be handled using Fresnel diffraction.

However the exact Airy pattern does appear at a finite distance if a lens is placed at the aperture. Then the Airy pattern will be perfectly focussed at the distance given by the lens's focal length (assuming collimated light incident on the aperture) given by the above equations.

The zeros of   are at  . From this, it follows that the first dark ring in the diffraction pattern occurs where  , or

 .

If a lens is used to focus the Airy pattern at a finite distance, then the radius   of the first dark ring on the focal plane is solely given by the numerical aperture A (closely related to the f-number) by

 

where the numerical aperture A is equal to the aperture's radius d/2 divided by R', the distance from the center of the Airy pattern to the edge of the aperture. Viewing the aperture of radius d/2 and lens as a camera (see diagram above) projecting an image onto a focal plane at distance f, the numerical aperture A is related to the commonly-cited f-number N= f/d (ratio of the focal length to the lens diameter) according to  ; for N≫1 it is simply approximated as  . This shows that the best possible image resolution of a camera is limited by the numerical aperture (and thus f-number) of its lens due to diffraction.

The half maximum of the central Airy disk (where  ) occurs at  ; the 1/e2 point (where  ) occurs at  , and the maximum of the first ring occurs at  .

The intensity   at the center of the diffraction pattern is related to the total power   incident on the aperture by[12]

 

where   is the source strength per unit area at the aperture, A is the area of the aperture ( ) and R is the distance from the aperture. At the focal plane of a lens,  . The intensity at the maximum of the first ring is about 1.75% of the intensity at the center of the Airy disk.

The expression for   above can be integrated to give the total power contained in the diffraction pattern within a circle of given size:

 

where   and   are Bessel functions. Hence the fractions of the total power contained within the first, second, and third dark rings (where  ) are 83.8%, 91.0%, and 93.8% respectively.[13]

 
The Airy Pattern on the interval kasinθ = [−10, 10]
 
The encircled power graphed next to the intensity.

Approximation using a Gaussian profile

 
A radial cross-section through the Airy pattern (solid curve) and its Gaussian profile approximation (dashed curve). The abscissa is given in units of the wavelength   times the f-number of the optical system.

The Airy pattern falls rather slowly to zero with increasing distance from the center, with the outer rings containing a significant portion of the integrated intensity of the pattern. As a result, the root mean square (RMS) spotsize is undefined (i.e. infinite). An alternative measure of the spot size is to ignore the relatively small outer rings of the Airy pattern and to approximate the central lobe with a Gaussian profile, such that

 

where   is the irradiance at the center of the pattern,   represents the radial distance from the center of the pattern, and   is the Gaussian RMS width (in one dimension). If we equate the peak amplitude of the Airy pattern and Gaussian profile, that is,  , and find the value of   giving the optimal approximation to the pattern, we obtain[14]

 

where N is the f-number. If, on the other hand, we wish to enforce that the Gaussian profile has the same volume as does the Airy pattern, then this becomes

 

In optical aberration theory, it is common to describe an imaging system as diffraction-limited if the Airy disk radius is larger than the RMS spotsize determined from geometric ray tracing (see Optical lens design). The Gaussian profile approximation provides an alternative means of comparison: using the approximation above shows that the Gaussian waist   of the Gaussian approximation to the Airy disk is about two-third the Airy disk radius, i.e.   as opposed to  .

Obscured Airy pattern

Similar equations can also be derived for the obscured Airy diffraction pattern[15][16] which is the diffraction pattern from an annular aperture or beam, i.e. a uniform circular aperture (beam) obscured by a circular block at the center. This situation is relevant to many common reflector telescope designs that incorporate a secondary mirror, including Newtonian telescopes and Schmidt–Cassegrain telescopes.

 

where   is the annular aperture obscuration ratio, or the ratio of the diameter of the obscuring disk and the diameter of the aperture (beam).  , and x is defined as above:   where   is the radial distance in the focal plane from the optical axis,   is the wavelength and   is the f-number of the system. The fractional encircled energy (the fraction of the total energy contained within a circle of radius   centered at the optical axis in the focal plane) is then given by:

 

For   the formulas reduce to the unobscured versions above.

The practical effect of having a central obstruction in a telescope is that the central disc becomes slightly smaller, and the first bright ring becomes brighter at the expense of the central disc. This becomes more problematic with short focal length telescopes which require larger secondary mirrors.[17]

Comparison to Gaussian beam focus

A circular laser beam with uniform intensity profile, focused by a lens, will form an Airy pattern at the focal plane of the lens. The intensity at the center of the focus will be   where   is the total power of the beam,   is the area of the beam (  is the beam diameter),   is the wavelength, and   is the focal length of the lens.

A Gaussian beam transmitted through a hard aperture will be clipped. Energy is lost and edge diffraction occurs effectively increasing the divergence. Because of these effects there is a Gaussian beam diameter which maximizes the intensity in the far field. This occurs when the   diameter of the Gaussian is 89% of the aperture diameter, and the on axis intensity in the far field will be 81% of that produced by a uniform intensity profile. [18]

See also

Notes and references

  1. ^ Herschel, J. F. W. (1828). "Light". Transactions Treatises on physical astronomy, light and sound contributed to the Encyclopaedia Metropolitana. Richard Griffin & Co. p. 491.
  2. ^ Airy, G. B. (1835). "On the Diffraction of an Object-glass with Circular Aperture". Transactions of the Cambridge Philosophical Society. pp. 283–91.
  3. ^ Airy, G. B., "On the Diffraction of an Object-glass with Circular Aperture", Transactions of the Cambridge Philosophical Society, Vol. 5, 1835, p. 287.
  4. ^ Sidgwick, J. B., Amateur Astronomer's Handbook, Dover Publications, 1980, pp. 39–40.
  5. ^ Graney, Christopher M., "Objects in Telescope Are Farther Than They Appear – How diffraction tricked Galileo into mismeasuring distances to the stars", , vol. 47, 2009, pp. 362–365.
  6. ^ Airy, G. B., "On the Diffraction of an Object-glass with Circular Aperture", Transactions of the Cambridge Philosophical Society, Vol. 5, 1835, p. 288.
  7. ^ Giancoli, D. C., Physics for Scientists and Engineers (3rd edition), Prentice-Hall, 2000, p. 896.
  8. ^ Hecht, Eugene (1987). Optics (2nd ed.). Addison Wesley. ISBN 0-201-11609-X. Sect. 5.7.1
  9. ^ Steve Chapman, ed. (2000). Optical System Design. McGraw-Hill Professional. ISBN 0-07-134916-2.
  10. ^ . Archived from the original on 2008-04-30. Retrieved 2008-09-20.
  11. ^ See http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Marksmanship, "Sight Alignment"
  12. ^ E. Hecht, Optics, Addison Wesley (2001)
  13. ^ M. Born and E. Wolf, Principles of Optics (Pergamon Press, New York, 1965)
  14. ^ Zhang, Bo; Zerubia, Josiane; Olivo-Marin, Jean-Christophe (2007-04-01). "Gaussian approximations of fluorescence microscope point-spread function models". Applied Optics. 46 (10): 1819–1829. Bibcode:2007ApOpt..46.1819Z. doi:10.1364/AO.46.001819. ISSN 2155-3165. PMID 17356626.
  15. ^ Rivolta, Applied Optics, 25, 2404 (1986).
  16. ^ Mahajan, J. Opt. Soc. Am. A, 3, 470 (1986).
  17. ^ Sacek, Vladimir (July 14, 2006). "Chapter 7 Obstruction effects (7.1. Central obstruction effect)". 7. Notes on amateur telescope optics. Retrieved May 18, 2013.
  18. ^ A.E. Siegman, Lasers, Se. 18.4, University Science Books, Mill Valley, CA, 1989

External links

  • Michael W. Davidson. "Concepts and Formulas in Microscopy: Resolution". Nikon MicroscopyU (website).
    • Kenneth R. Spring; Brian O. Flynn & Michael W. Davidson. "Image Formation: Numerical Aperture and Image Resolution". Retrieved June 15, 2006. (Interactive Java Tutorial) Molecular Expressions (website).
    • Kenneth R. Spring; Brian O. Flynn & Michael W. Davidson. "Image Formation: Airy Pattern Formation". Retrieved June 15, 2006.(Interactive Java Tutorial) Molecular Expressions.
  • Paul Padley. "Diffraction from a Circular Aperture"., Connexions (website), November 8, 2005. – Mathematical details to derive the above formula.
  • , Oldham Optical UK.
  • Weisstein, Eric W. "Bessel Function Zeros". MathWorld.
  • "Extended Nijboer-Zernike (ENZ) Analysis and Aberration Retrieval".

airy, disk, optics, airy, disc, airy, pattern, descriptions, best, focused, spot, light, that, perfect, lens, with, circular, aperture, make, limited, diffraction, light, importance, physics, optics, astronomy, computer, generated, image, grayscale, intensitie. In optics the Airy disk or Airy disc and Airy pattern are descriptions of the best focused spot of light that a perfect lens with a circular aperture can make limited by the diffraction of light The Airy disk is of importance in physics optics and astronomy A computer generated image of an Airy disk The grayscale intensities have been adjusted to enhance the brightness of the outer rings of the Airy pattern A computer generated Airy disk from diffracted white light D65 spectrum Note that the red component is diffracted more than the blue so that the center appears slightly bluish A real Airy disk created by passing a red laser beam through a 90 micrometre pinhole aperture with 27 orders of diffraction Airy disk captured by 2000 mm camera lens at f 25 aperture Image size 1 1 mm The diffraction pattern resulting from a uniformly illuminated circular aperture has a bright central region known as the Airy disk which together with the series of concentric rings around is called the Airy pattern Both are named after George Biddell Airy The disk and rings phenomenon had been known prior to Airy John Herschel described the appearance of a bright star seen through a telescope under high magnification for an 1828 article on light for the Encyclopedia Metropolitana the star is then seen in favourable circumstances of tranquil atmosphere uniform temperature etc as a perfectly round well defined planetary disc surrounded by two three or more alternately dark and bright rings which if examined attentively are seen to be slightly coloured at their borders They succeed each other nearly at equal intervals round the central disc 1 Airy wrote the first full theoretical treatment explaining the phenomenon his 1835 On the Diffraction of an Object glass with Circular Aperture 2 Mathematically the diffraction pattern is characterized by the wavelength of light illuminating the circular aperture and the aperture s size The appearance of the diffraction pattern is additionally characterized by the sensitivity of the eye or other detector used to observe the pattern The most important application of this concept is in cameras microscopes and telescopes Due to diffraction the smallest point to which a lens or mirror can focus a beam of light is the size of the Airy disk Even if one were able to make a perfect lens there is still a limit to the resolution of an image created by such a lens An optical system in which the resolution is no longer limited by imperfections in the lenses but only by diffraction is said to be diffraction limited Contents 1 Size 2 Examples 2 1 Cameras 2 2 The human eye 2 3 Focused laser beam 2 4 Aiming sight 3 Conditions for observation 4 Mathematical formulation 5 Approximation using a Gaussian profile 6 Obscured Airy pattern 7 Comparison to Gaussian beam focus 8 See also 9 Notes and references 10 External linksSize EditFar from the aperture the angle at which the first minimum occurs measured from the direction of incoming light is given by the approximate formula sin 8 1 22 l d displaystyle sin theta approx 1 22 frac lambda d or for small angles simply 8 1 22 l d displaystyle theta approx 1 22 frac lambda d where 8 is in radians l is the wavelength of the light in meters and d is the diameter of the aperture in meters The full width at half maximum is given by 8 F W H M 1 025 l d displaystyle theta mathrm FWHM 1 025 frac lambda d Airy wrote this relation as s 2 76 a displaystyle s frac 2 76 a where s was the angle of first minimum in seconds of arc a was the radius of the aperture in inches and the wavelength of light was assumed to be 0 000022 inches 560 nm the mean of visible wavelengths 3 This is equal to the angular resolution of a circular aperture The Rayleigh criterion for barely resolving two objects that are point sources of light such as stars seen through a telescope is that the center of the Airy disk for the first object occurs at the first minimum of the Airy disk of the second This means that the angular resolution of a diffraction limited system is given by the same formulae However while the angle at which the first minimum occurs which is sometimes described as the radius of the Airy disk depends only on wavelength and aperture size the appearance of the diffraction pattern will vary with the intensity brightness of the light source Because any detector eye film digital used to observe the diffraction pattern can have an intensity threshold for detection the full diffraction pattern may not be apparent In astronomy the outer rings are frequently not apparent even in a highly magnified image of a star It may be that none of the rings are apparent in which case the star image appears as a disk central maximum only rather than as a full diffraction pattern Furthermore fainter stars will appear as smaller disks than brighter stars because less of their central maximum reaches the threshold of detection 4 While in theory all stars or other point sources of a given wavelength and seen through a given aperture have the same Airy disk radius characterized by the above equation and the same diffraction pattern size differing only in intensity the appearance is that fainter sources appear as smaller disks and brighter sources appear as larger disks 5 This was described by Airy in his original work 6 The rapid decrease of light in the successive rings will sufficiently explain the visibility of two or three rings with a very bright star and the non visibility of rings with a faint star The difference of the diameters of the central spots or spurious disks of different stars is also fully explained Thus the radius of the spurious disk of a faint star where light of less than half the intensity of the central light makes no impression on the eye is determined by s 1 17 a whereas the radius of the spurious disk of a bright star where light of 1 10 the intensity of the central light is sensible is determined by s 1 97 a Despite this feature of Airy s work the radius of the Airy disk is often given as being simply the angle of first minimum even in standard textbooks 7 In reality the angle of first minimum is a limiting value for the size of the Airy disk and not a definite radius Examples Edit Log log plot of aperture diameter vs angular resolution at the diffraction limit for various light wavelengths compared with various astronomical instruments For example the blue star shows that the Hubble Space Telescope is almost diffraction limited in the visible spectrum at 0 1 arcsecs whereas the red circle shows that the human eye should have a resolving power of 20 arcsecs in theory though 20 20 vision resolves to only 60 arcsecs 1 arcminute Cameras Edit If two objects imaged by a camera are separated by an angle small enough that their Airy disks on the camera detector start overlapping the objects cannot be clearly separated any more in the image and they start blurring together Two objects are said to be just resolved when the maximum of the first Airy pattern falls on top of the first minimum of the second Airy pattern the Rayleigh criterion Therefore the smallest angular separation two objects can have before they significantly blur together is given as stated above by sin 8 1 22 l d displaystyle sin theta 1 22 frac lambda d Thus the ability of the system to resolve detail is limited by the ratio of l d The larger the aperture for a given wavelength the finer the detail that can be distinguished in the image This can also be expressed as x f 1 22 l d displaystyle frac x f 1 22 frac lambda d where x displaystyle x is the separation of the images of the two objects on the film and f displaystyle f is the distance from the lens to the film If we take the distance from the lens to the film to be approximately equal to the focal length of the lens we find x 1 22 l f d displaystyle x 1 22 frac lambda f d but f d displaystyle frac f d is the f number of a lens A typical setting for use on an overcast day would be f 8 see Sunny 16 rule For violet the shortest wavelength visible light the wavelength l is about 420 nanometers see cone cells for sensitivity of S cone cells This gives a value for x displaystyle x of about 4 µm In a digital camera making the pixels of the image sensor smaller than half this value one pixel for each object one for each space between would not significantly increase the captured image resolution However it may improve the final image by over sampling allowing noise reduction The human eye Edit Longitudinal sections through a focused beam with top negative center zero and bottom positive spherical aberration The lens is to the left The fastest f number for the human eye is about 2 1 8 corresponding to a diffraction limited point spread function with approximately 1 mm diameter However at this f number spherical aberration limits visual acuity while a 3 mm pupil diameter f 5 7 approximates the resolution achieved by the human eye 9 The maximum density of cones in the human fovea is approximately 170 000 per square millimeter 10 which implies that the cone spacing in the human eye is about 2 5 mm approximately the diameter of the point spread function at f 5 Focused laser beam Edit A circular laser beam with uniform intensity across the circle a flat top beam focused by a lens will form an Airy disk pattern at the focus The size of the Airy disk determines the laser intensity at the focus Aiming sight Edit Some weapon aiming sights e g FN FNC require the user to align a peep sight rear nearby sight i e which will be out of focus with a tip which should be focused and overlaid on the target at the end of the barrel When looking through the peep sight the user will notice an Airy disk that will help center the sight over the pin 11 Conditions for observation EditLight from a uniformly illuminated circular aperture or from a uniform flattop beam will exhibit an Airy diffraction pattern far away from the aperture due to Fraunhofer diffraction far field diffraction The conditions for being in the far field and exhibiting an Airy pattern are the incoming light illuminating the aperture is a plane wave no phase variation across the aperture the intensity is constant over the area of the aperture and the distance R displaystyle R from the aperture where the diffracted light is observed the screen distance is large compared to the aperture size and the radius a displaystyle a of the aperture is not too much larger than the wavelength l displaystyle lambda of the light The last two conditions can be formally written as R gt a 2 l displaystyle R gt a 2 lambda In practice the conditions for uniform illumination can be met by placing the source of the illumination far from the aperture If the conditions for far field are not met for example if the aperture is large the far field Airy diffraction pattern can also be obtained on a screen much closer to the aperture by using a lens right after the aperture or the lens itself can form the aperture The Airy pattern will then be formed at the focus of the lens rather than at infinity Hence the focal spot of a uniform circular laser beam a flattop beam focused by a lens will also be an Airy pattern In a camera or imaging system an object far away gets imaged onto the film or detector plane by the objective lens and the far field diffraction pattern is observed at the detector The resulting image is a convolution of the ideal image with the Airy diffraction pattern due to diffraction from the iris aperture or due to the finite size of the lens This leads to the finite resolution of a lens system described above Mathematical formulation Edit Diffraction from a circular aperture The Airy pattern is observable when R a 2 l displaystyle R gg a 2 lambda i e in the far field Diffraction from an aperture with a lens The far field image will only be formed at the screen one focal length away where R f f focal length The observation angle 8 displaystyle theta stays the same as in the lensless case The intensity of the Airy pattern follows the Fraunhofer diffraction pattern of a circular aperture given by the squared modulus of the Fourier transform of the circular aperture I 8 I 0 2 J 1 k a sin 8 k a sin 8 2 I 0 2 J 1 x x 2 displaystyle I theta I 0 left frac 2J 1 k a sin theta k a sin theta right 2 I 0 left frac 2J 1 x x right 2 where I 0 displaystyle I 0 is the maximum intensity of the pattern at the Airy disc center J 1 displaystyle J 1 is the Bessel function of the first kind of order one k 2 p l displaystyle k 2 pi lambda is the wavenumber a displaystyle a is the radius of the aperture and 8 displaystyle theta is the angle of observation i e the angle between the axis of the circular aperture and the line between aperture center and observation point x k a sin 8 2 p a l q R displaystyle x ka sin theta frac 2 pi a lambda frac q R where q is the radial distance from the observation point to the optical axis and R is its distance to the aperture Note that the Airy disk as given by the above expression is only valid for large R where Fraunhofer diffraction applies calculation of the shadow in the near field must rather be handled using Fresnel diffraction However the exact Airy pattern does appear at a finite distance if a lens is placed at the aperture Then the Airy pattern will be perfectly focussed at the distance given by the lens s focal length assuming collimated light incident on the aperture given by the above equations The zeros of J 1 x displaystyle J 1 x are at x k a sin 8 3 8317 7 0156 10 1735 13 3237 16 4706 displaystyle x ka sin theta approx 3 8317 7 0156 10 1735 13 3237 16 4706 dots From this it follows that the first dark ring in the diffraction pattern occurs where k a sin 8 3 8317 displaystyle ka sin theta 3 8317 dots or sin 8 3 83 k a 3 83 l 2 p a 1 22 l 2 a 1 22 l d displaystyle sin theta approx frac 3 83 ka frac 3 83 lambda 2 pi a 1 22 frac lambda 2a 1 22 frac lambda d If a lens is used to focus the Airy pattern at a finite distance then the radius q 1 displaystyle q 1 of the first dark ring on the focal plane is solely given by the numerical aperture A closely related to the f number by q 1 R sin 8 1 1 22 R l d 1 22 l 2 A displaystyle q 1 R sin theta 1 approx 1 22 R frac lambda d 1 22 frac lambda 2A where the numerical aperture A is equal to the aperture s radius d 2 divided by R the distance from the center of the Airy pattern to the edge of the aperture Viewing the aperture of radius d 2 and lens as a camera see diagram above projecting an image onto a focal plane at distance f the numerical aperture A is related to the commonly cited f number N f d ratio of the focal length to the lens diameter according to A r R r f 2 r 2 1 4 N 2 1 displaystyle A frac r R frac r sqrt f 2 r 2 frac 1 sqrt 4N 2 1 for N 1 it is simply approximated as A 1 2 N displaystyle A approx frac 1 2N This shows that the best possible image resolution of a camera is limited by the numerical aperture and thus f number of its lens due to diffraction The half maximum of the central Airy disk where 2 J 1 x x 1 2 displaystyle 2J 1 x x 1 sqrt 2 occurs at x 1 61633995 displaystyle x 1 61633995 dots the 1 e2 point where 2 J 1 x x 1 e displaystyle 2J 1 x x 1 e occurs at x 2 58383899 displaystyle x 2 58383899 dots and the maximum of the first ring occurs at x 5 13562230 displaystyle x 5 13562230 dots The intensity I 0 displaystyle I 0 at the center of the diffraction pattern is related to the total power P 0 displaystyle P 0 incident on the aperture by 12 I 0 E A 2 A 2 2 R 2 P 0 A l 2 R 2 displaystyle I 0 frac mathrm E A 2 A 2 2R 2 frac P 0 A lambda 2 R 2 where E displaystyle mathrm E is the source strength per unit area at the aperture A is the area of the aperture A p a 2 displaystyle A pi a 2 and R is the distance from the aperture At the focal plane of a lens I 0 P 0 A l 2 f 2 displaystyle I 0 P 0 A lambda 2 f 2 The intensity at the maximum of the first ring is about 1 75 of the intensity at the center of the Airy disk The expression for I 8 displaystyle I theta above can be integrated to give the total power contained in the diffraction pattern within a circle of given size P 8 P 0 1 J 0 2 k a sin 8 J 1 2 k a sin 8 displaystyle P theta P 0 1 J 0 2 ka sin theta J 1 2 ka sin theta where J 0 displaystyle J 0 and J 1 displaystyle J 1 are Bessel functions Hence the fractions of the total power contained within the first second and third dark rings where J 1 k a sin 8 0 displaystyle J 1 ka sin theta 0 are 83 8 91 0 and 93 8 respectively 13 The Airy Pattern on the interval kasin8 10 10 The encircled power graphed next to the intensity Approximation using a Gaussian profile Edit A radial cross section through the Airy pattern solid curve and its Gaussian profile approximation dashed curve The abscissa is given in units of the wavelength l displaystyle lambda times the f number of the optical system The Airy pattern falls rather slowly to zero with increasing distance from the center with the outer rings containing a significant portion of the integrated intensity of the pattern As a result the root mean square RMS spotsize is undefined i e infinite An alternative measure of the spot size is to ignore the relatively small outer rings of the Airy pattern and to approximate the central lobe with a Gaussian profile such that I q I 0 exp 2 q 2 w 0 2 displaystyle I q approx I 0 exp left frac 2q 2 omega 0 2 right where I 0 displaystyle I 0 is the irradiance at the center of the pattern q displaystyle q represents the radial distance from the center of the pattern and w 0 textstyle omega 0 is the Gaussian RMS width in one dimension If we equate the peak amplitude of the Airy pattern and Gaussian profile that is I 0 I 0 displaystyle I 0 I 0 and find the value of w 0 textstyle omega 0 giving the optimal approximation to the pattern we obtain 14 w 0 0 84 l N textstyle omega 0 approx 0 84 lambda N where N is the f number If on the other hand we wish to enforce that the Gaussian profile has the same volume as does the Airy pattern then this becomes w 0 0 90 l N textstyle omega 0 approx 0 90 lambda N In optical aberration theory it is common to describe an imaging system as diffraction limited if the Airy disk radius is larger than the RMS spotsize determined from geometric ray tracing see Optical lens design The Gaussian profile approximation provides an alternative means of comparison using the approximation above shows that the Gaussian waist w 0 textstyle omega 0 of the Gaussian approximation to the Airy disk is about two third the Airy disk radius i e 0 84 l N displaystyle 0 84 lambda N as opposed to 1 22 l N displaystyle 1 22 lambda N Obscured Airy pattern EditSimilar equations can also be derived for the obscured Airy diffraction pattern 15 16 which is the diffraction pattern from an annular aperture or beam i e a uniform circular aperture beam obscured by a circular block at the center This situation is relevant to many common reflector telescope designs that incorporate a secondary mirror including Newtonian telescopes and Schmidt Cassegrain telescopes I R I 0 1 ϵ 2 2 2 J 1 x x 2 ϵ J 1 ϵ x x 2 displaystyle I R frac I 0 1 epsilon 2 2 left frac 2J 1 x x frac 2 epsilon J 1 epsilon x x right 2 where ϵ displaystyle epsilon is the annular aperture obscuration ratio or the ratio of the diameter of the obscuring disk and the diameter of the aperture beam 0 ϵ lt 1 displaystyle left 0 leq epsilon lt 1 right and x is defined as above x k a sin 8 p R l N displaystyle x ka sin theta approx frac pi R lambda N where R displaystyle R is the radial distance in the focal plane from the optical axis l displaystyle lambda is the wavelength and N displaystyle N is the f number of the system The fractional encircled energy the fraction of the total energy contained within a circle of radius R displaystyle R centered at the optical axis in the focal plane is then given by E R 1 1 ϵ 2 1 J 0 2 x J 1 2 x ϵ 2 1 J 0 2 ϵ x J 1 2 ϵ x 4 ϵ 0 x J 1 t J 1 ϵ t t d t displaystyle E R frac 1 1 epsilon 2 left 1 J 0 2 x J 1 2 x epsilon 2 left 1 J 0 2 epsilon x J 1 2 epsilon x right 4 epsilon int 0 x frac J 1 t J 1 epsilon t t dt right For ϵ 0 displaystyle epsilon rightarrow 0 the formulas reduce to the unobscured versions above The practical effect of having a central obstruction in a telescope is that the central disc becomes slightly smaller and the first bright ring becomes brighter at the expense of the central disc This becomes more problematic with short focal length telescopes which require larger secondary mirrors 17 Comparison to Gaussian beam focus EditA circular laser beam with uniform intensity profile focused by a lens will form an Airy pattern at the focal plane of the lens The intensity at the center of the focus will be I 0 A i r y P 0 A l 2 f 2 displaystyle I 0 Airy P 0 A lambda 2 f 2 where P 0 displaystyle P 0 is the total power of the beam A p D 2 4 displaystyle A pi D 2 4 is the area of the beam D displaystyle D is the beam diameter l displaystyle lambda is the wavelength and f displaystyle f is the focal length of the lens A Gaussian beam transmitted through a hard aperture will be clipped Energy is lost and edge diffraction occurs effectively increasing the divergence Because of these effects there is a Gaussian beam diameter which maximizes the intensity in the far field This occurs when the 1 e 2 displaystyle 1 e 2 diameter of the Gaussian is 89 of the aperture diameter and the on axis intensity in the far field will be 81 of that produced by a uniform intensity profile 18 See also EditAmateur astronomy Apodization Fraunhofer diffraction Bloom shader effect Newton s rings Optical unit Point spread function Debye Scherrer ring Strehl ratio Speckle patternNotes and references Edit Herschel J F W 1828 Light Transactions Treatises on physical astronomy light and sound contributed to the Encyclopaedia Metropolitana Richard Griffin amp Co p 491 Airy G B 1835 On the Diffraction of an Object glass with Circular Aperture Transactions of the Cambridge Philosophical Society pp 283 91 Airy G B On the Diffraction of an Object glass with Circular Aperture Transactions of the Cambridge Philosophical Society Vol 5 1835 p 287 Sidgwick J B Amateur Astronomer s Handbook Dover Publications 1980 pp 39 40 Graney Christopher M Objects in Telescope Are Farther Than They Appear How diffraction tricked Galileo into mismeasuring distances to the stars The Physics Teacher vol 47 2009 pp 362 365 Airy G B On the Diffraction of an Object glass with Circular Aperture Transactions of the Cambridge Philosophical Society Vol 5 1835 p 288 Giancoli D C Physics for Scientists and Engineers 3rd edition Prentice Hall 2000 p 896 Hecht Eugene 1987 Optics 2nd ed Addison Wesley ISBN 0 201 11609 X Sect 5 7 1 Steve Chapman ed 2000 Optical System Design McGraw Hill Professional ISBN 0 07 134916 2 Eye Receptor Density Archived from the original on 2008 04 30 Retrieved 2008 09 20 See http en wikibooks org wiki Marksmanship Sight Alignment E Hecht Optics Addison Wesley 2001 M Born and E Wolf Principles of Optics Pergamon Press New York 1965 Zhang Bo Zerubia Josiane Olivo Marin Jean Christophe 2007 04 01 Gaussian approximations of fluorescence microscope point spread function models Applied Optics 46 10 1819 1829 Bibcode 2007ApOpt 46 1819Z doi 10 1364 AO 46 001819 ISSN 2155 3165 PMID 17356626 Rivolta Applied Optics 25 2404 1986 Mahajan J Opt Soc Am A 3 470 1986 Sacek Vladimir July 14 2006 Chapter 7 Obstruction effects 7 1 Central obstruction effect 7 Notes on amateur telescope optics Retrieved May 18 2013 A E Siegman Lasers Se 18 4 University Science Books Mill Valley CA 1989External links EditMichael W Davidson Concepts and Formulas in Microscopy Resolution Nikon MicroscopyU website Kenneth R Spring Brian O Flynn amp Michael W Davidson Image Formation Numerical Aperture and Image Resolution Retrieved June 15 2006 Interactive Java Tutorial Molecular Expressions website Kenneth R Spring Brian O Flynn amp Michael W Davidson Image Formation Airy Pattern Formation Retrieved June 15 2006 Interactive Java Tutorial Molecular Expressions Paul Padley Diffraction from a Circular Aperture Connexions website November 8 2005 Mathematical details to derive the above formula The Airy Disk An Explanation Of What It Is And Why You Can t Avoid It Oldham Optical UK Weisstein Eric W Bessel Function Zeros MathWorld Extended Nijboer Zernike ENZ Analysis and Aberration Retrieval Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Airy disk amp oldid 1131507134, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.