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Airy disc



   

The Airy disc (or Airy disk) is a phenomenon in optics. Owing to the wave nature of light, light passing through an aperture is diffracted and forms a pattern of light and dark regions on a screen some distance away from the aperture (see interference).

The diffraction pattern resulting from a uniformly illuminated circular aperture has a bright region in the center, known as the Airy disc which together with a series of concentric rings is called the Airy pattern (both named after George Airy). The diameter of this disc is related to the wavelength of the illuminating light and the size of the circular aperture.

The most important application of this concept is in cameras and telescopes. Due to diffraction, the smallest point to which one can focus a beam of light using a lens 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 this 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.

The Airy disc is of importance in physics, optics, and astronomy.

Contents

Size of the Airy disc

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

\sin \theta = 1.22 \frac{\lambda}{d}

where λ is the wavelength of the light and d is the diameter of the aperture. The Rayleigh criterion for barely resolving two objects is that the center of the Airy disc for the first object occurs at the first minimum of the Airy disc of the second. This means that the angular resolution of a diffraction limited system is given by the same formula.

Examples

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 can not 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 \theta = 1.22\ \frac{\lambda}{d}

Since θ is small we can approximate this by

\frac{x}{f} = 1.22\ \frac{\lambda}{d}

where x is the separation of the images of the two objects on the film and 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\ \frac{\lambda f}{d}

but \frac{f}{d} is the f-number of a lens. A typical setting for use on an overcast day would be f/8.[1] For blue visible light, the wavelength λ is about 420 nanometers.[2] This gives a value for x of about 0.004 mm. In a digital camera, making the pixels of the image sensor smaller than this would not actually increase image resolution.

The human eye

The smallest f-number for the human eye is about 2.1.[3] The resulting resolution is about 1 μm. This happens to be about the distance between optically sensitive cells, photoreceptors, in the human eye.[citation needed]

Focused laser beam

A circular laser beam with uniform intensity across the circle (a flattop 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.

Conditions for observation of the Airy disk

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 R from the aperture where the diffracted light is observed (the screen distance) is large compared the aperture size, and the radius a of the aperture is not too much larger than the wavelength λ of the light. The last two conditions can be formally written as R > a2 / λ .

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 details

   

The intensity of the Fraunhofer diffraction pattern of a circular aperture (the Airy pattern) is given by:

I(\theta) = I_0 \left ( \frac{2 J_1(ka \sin \theta)}{ka \sin \theta} \right )^2 = I_0 \left ( \frac{2 J_1(x)}{x} \right )^2

where I0 is the intensity in the center of the diffraction pattern, J1 is the Bessel function of the first kind of order one, k = 2π / λ is the wavenumber, a is the radius of the aperture, and θ 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 = ka \sin \theta = \frac{2 \pi a}{\lambda} \frac{q}{R} = \frac{\pi q}{\lambda N}, where q is the radial distance from the optics axis in the observation (or focal) plane and N = R / d (d=2a is the aperture diameter, R is the observation distance) is the f-number of the system. If a lens after the aperture is used, the Airy pattern forms at the focal plane of the lens, where R = f (f is the focal length of the lens). Note that the limit for \theta \rightarrow 0 (or for x \rightarrow 0) is I(0) = I0.

The zeros of J1(x) are at x = ka \sin \theta \approx 0, 3.8317, 7.0156, 10.1735, 13.3268, 16.4706.... From this follows that the first dark ring in the diffraction pattern occurs where

\sin \theta = \frac{3.83}{ka} = \frac{3.83 \lambda}{2 \pi a} = 1.22 \frac{\lambda}{2a} = 1.22 \frac{\lambda}{d}.

The radius q1 of the first dark ring on a screen is related to θ by

q1 = Rsinθ

where R is the distance from the aperture. The half maximum of the central Airy disk (where J1(x) = 1 / 2) occurs at x = 1.61633...; the 1/e2 point (where J1(x) = 1 / e2) occurs at x = 2.58383..., and the maximum of the first ring occurs at x = 5.13562....

The intensity I0 at the center of the diffraction pattern is related to the total power P0 incident on the aperture by[4]

I_0 = \frac{\Epsilon_A^2 A^2}{2 R^2} = \frac{P_0 A}{\lambda^2 R^2}

where Ε is the source strength per unit area at the aperture, A is the area of the aperture (A = πa2) and R is the distance from the aperture. At the focal plane of a lens, I0 = (P0A) / (λ2f2). 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(θ) above can be integrated to give the total power contained in the diffraction pattern within a circle of given size:

P(\theta) = P_0 [ 1 - J_0^2(ka \sin \theta) - J_1^2(ka \sin \theta) ]

where J0 and J1 are Bessel functions. Hence the fractions of the total power contained within the first, second, and third dark rings (where J1(kasinθ) = 0) are 83.8%, 91.0%, and 93.8% respectively.[5]

Obscured Airy pattern

Similar equations can also be derived for the obscured Airy diffraction pattern[6][7], 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.

I(\theta) = \frac{I_0}{ (1 - \epsilon ^2)^2} \left ( \frac{2 J_1(x)}{x} - \frac{2 \epsilon J_1(\epsilon x)}{x}\right )^2

where ε is the annular aperture obscuration ratio, or the ratio of the diameter of the obscuring disk and the diameter of the aperture (beam). \left( 0 \le \epsilon < 1 \right), and x is defined as above: x=ka\sin(\theta) \approx \frac {\pi R}{\lambda N} where R is the radial distance in the focal plane from the optical axis, λ is the wavelength and N is the f-number of the system. The encircled energy (the fraction of the total energy contained within a circle of radius R centered at the optical axis in the focal plane) is then given by:

E(R) = \frac{I_0}{ (1 - \epsilon ^2)^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 \epsilon \rightarrow 0 the formulas reduce to the unobscured versions above.

Comparison of Airy disk and 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 disk. The intensity at the center of the focus will be I0,Airy = (P0A) / (λ2f2) where P0 is the total power of the beam, A = πD2 / 4 is the area of the beam (D is the beam diameter), λ is the wavelength, and f is the focal length of the lens.

A Gaussian beam with 1 / e2 diameter of D focused through an aperture of diameter D will have a focal profile that is nearly Gaussian, and the intensity at the center of the focus will be 0.924 times I0,Airy.[7]

See also

Notes and references

  1. ^ See Sunny 16 rule.
  2. ^ See cone cells for sensitivy of S cone cells.
  3. ^ Hecht, Eugene (1987). Optics, 2nd ed., Addison Wesley. ISBN 0-201-11609-X.  Sect. 5.7.1
  4. ^ E. Hecht, Optics, Addison Wesley (2001)
  5. ^ M. Born and E. Wolf, Principles of Optics (Pergamon Press, New York, 1965)
  6. ^ Rivolta, Applied Optics, 25, 2404 (1986).
  7. ^ a b Mahajan, J. Opt. Soc. Am. A, 3, 470 (1986).
 
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Airy_disc". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia.
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