Numerical aperture
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In optics, the numerical aperture (NA) of an optical system is a dimensionless number that characterizes the range of angles over which the system can accept or emit light. The exact definition of the term varies slightly between different areas of optics.
General optics
In most areas of optics, and especially in microscopy, the numerical aperture of an optical system such as an objective lens is defined by
- [\mathrm = n \sin \theta\;]
In microscopy, NA is important because it indicates the resolving power of a lens. The size of the finest detail that can be resolved is proportional to λ/NA, where λ is the wavelength of the light. A lens with a larger numerical aperture will be able to visualize finer details than a lens with a smaller numerical aperture. Lenses with larger numerical apertures also collect more light and will generally provide a brighter image.
Numerical aperture is a measure of the diameter of the aperture compared to the focal length. In photography, this relationship is usually expressed via the f-number, f/#, which for a thin lens imaging an object at infinity is given by
- [f/\# = \frac }] (this is only good for very low numerical aperture lenses).
Laser physics
In laser physics, the numerical aperture is defined slightly differently. Laser beams spread out as they propagate, but slowly. Far away from the narrowest part of the beam, the spread is roughly linear with distance—the laser beam forms a cone of light in the "far field". The same relation gives the NA,- [\mathrm = n \sin \theta\;],
- [\mathrm\simeq \frac],
Fiber optics
Multimode optical fiber will only propagate light that enters the fiber within a certain cone, known as the acceptance cone of the fiber. The half-angle of this cone is called the acceptance angle, θmax. For step-index multimode fiber, the acceptance angle is determined only by the indices of refraction:- [n \sin \theta_ = \sqrt],
This has the same form as the numerical aperture in other optical systems, so it has become common to define the NA of any type of fiber to be
- [\mathrm \equiv \sqrt],
In multimode fibers, the term equilibrium numerical aperture is sometimes used. This refers to the numerical aperture with respect to the extreme exit angle of a ray emerging from a fiber in which equilibrium mode distribution has been established.
References
See also
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