Angular resolution Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
Resolving power is the ability of a microscope or telescope to measure the angular separation of images that are close together. Angular resolution describes the resolving power of a telescope. Resolution is the minimum distance between distinguishable objects, in microscopyResolving power is also relevant in the inverse case, where one is focusing a beam of light from an emitter onto a target.
The resolving power of a lens is ultimately limited by diffraction effects. The lens' aperture is a "hole" that is analogous to a two-dimensional version of the single-slit experiment; light passing through it interferes with itself, creating a ring-shaped diffraction pattern, known as the Airy pattern, that blurs the image. The diffraction limit is given by the Rayleigh criterion:
For a ideal lens of focal length f, this results in a minimum spatial resolution, Δl:
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Point-like sources separated by an angle smaller than the angular resolution can not be resolved. A single optical telescope has an angular resolution less than one arcsecond, but seeing and other atmospheric effects make attaining this very hard. The highest angular resolutions can be achieved by interferometry.
The angular resolution of a telecope can usually be approximated by R = L/D where L is the wavelength of the observed radiation and D is the diameter of the telescope. The resulting R is in radians. Sources larger than the angular resolution are called extended sources or diffuse sources, and smaller sources are called point sources.
For example, in the case of yellow light with a wavelength of 580 nm, for a resolution of 1", we need D = 12 cm.
The resolution D depends on the angular aperture α:
Due to the limitations of the values α, λ, and N, the limit of a light microscope using visible light is 200nm. This is because: α for the best lens is 70° (sinα=0.94), shortest wavelength of visible light is blue (λ=450nm) and
Telescope case
Microscope case
Here α depends on the width of objective lens and its distance from the specimen; and N is a measure of the number of degrees to which a medium bends a light ray which passes through it. The shorter λ, the lower the value of D, the higher the resolution.
To improve the resolving power of microscopes oil immersion lenses can be used; these use a layer of high-density transparent oil to reduce the effective index of refraction of the lens.
