Starter track
Step 5 of 50 / 5 completeWave Optics
Earlier steps still set up Optical Resolution / Imaging Limits.
Previous step: Dispersion / Refractive Index and Color.
Concept module
Image two nearby point sources through one finite aperture and see why diffraction, wavelength, and aperture diameter limit how sharply an optical system can separate them.
Interactive lab
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Starter track
Step 5 of 50 / 5 completeEarlier steps still set up Optical Resolution / Imaging Limits.
Previous step: Dispersion / Refractive Index and Color.
Why it behaves this way
An imaging system does not send each object point to a mathematically perfect point on the detector. A finite aperture diffracts the light, so each point becomes a blur pattern with a finite width.
This page keeps that story bounded on purpose: two equal point sources, one finite lens aperture, and one detector strip. The same wavelength, aperture diameter, point separation, and detector sample drive the stage, the profile graph, the overlays, the worked examples, the prediction prompts, the challenge checks, and the quick test so imaging limits stay tied to one honest diffraction-limited picture instead of a giant Fourier-optics platform.
Key ideas
Frozen walkthrough
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View plans550 nm nm
2.4 mm mm
0.28 mrad mrad
1. Start from the Rayleigh estimate
2. Substitute the live wavelength and aperture
3. Map that blur scale onto the detector
Current Rayleigh limit
Common misconception
If the lens is focused correctly, two nearby points should always stay perfectly separate.
Correct focus removes defocus blur, but it does not remove diffraction from a finite aperture.
That is why nearby points can still merge when the aperture is small or the wavelength is long, even in an otherwise ideal imaging setup.
Mini challenge
Make a prediction before you reveal the next step.
Check your reasoning against the live bench.
Quick test
Variable effect
Question 1 of 4
Use the live bench to test the result before moving on.
Accessibility
The simulation shows two distant point sources on the left, one finite lens aperture in the middle, and one detector strip on the right. Each source sends light through the same aperture, and the detector strip brightens according to the combined diffraction-limited image profile.
Optional overlays show the aperture diameter on the lens, the current point-spread centers on the detector, and the Rayleigh blur scale around those centers. A movable detector sample marks one position on the strip and reports the current normalized exposure there.
Graph summary
The graph shows normalized exposure against detector height, with one combined profile and two dashed component profiles for the individual point-spread contributions.
Hovering the graph previews the matching detector position on the stage, so the spatial profile stays linked to the same image plane rather than turning into a detached time plot.
Read next
Open the next concept, route, or track only when you want the current model to widen into a larger branch.
Use two coherent slits and one screen to connect path difference, phase difference, and fringe spacing to wavelength, slit separation, and screen distance on one compact optics bench.
Trace principal rays through converging and diverging lenses, connect the signed thin-lens equation to the diagram, and watch image distance and magnification respond to the same object setup.
Watch a wave spread after one narrow opening, see why diffraction grows when wavelength competes with slit width, and build the wave-optics bridge toward double-slit interference.