Diffraction, Fourier Optics and Imaging

Chapter 10 - Imaging with Quasi-Monochromatic Waves

10.1   INTRODUCTION

In previous chapters, wave propagation and imaging with coherent and monochromatic
wave fields were discussed. In this chapter, this is extended to wave propagation and
imaging with quasi-monochromatic coherent or incoherent wave fields.

Monochromatic wave fields have a single temporal frequency f. Nonmonochromatic
wave fields
have many temporal frequencies. Quasi-monochromatic wave
fields
have a temporal frequency spread Δf , which is much less than the average
temporal frequency fc. In practical imaging applications, wave fields can usually be
assumed to be quasi-monochromatic.

This chapter consists of 10 sections. The first few sections lay the groundwork for
the theory that is pertinent for analyzing quasi-monochromatic waves. Section 10.2
introduces the Hilbert transform that is closely related to the Fourier transform. Its
main property is swapping the cosine and sine frequency components. It is a tool that
is needed to define the analytic signal described in Section 10.3. The analytic signal
is complex, with its real part equal to a real signal and its imaginary part equal to
the Hilbert transform of the same real signal. In addition to its use in analyzing
quasi-monochromatic waves, it is commonly used in analyzing single-sideband
modulation in communications.

Section 10.4 shows how to represent a quasi-monochromatic wave in terms of an
analytic signal. The meanings of quasi-monochromatic, coherent, and incoherent
waves are more closely examined in Section 10.5 with spatial coherence and time
coherence
concepts.

The theory developed up to this point for simple optical systems is generalized to
more complex imaging systems in Section 10.6. Imaging with quasi-monochromatic
waves is the subject of Section 10.7. The difference between coherent imaging and
incoherent imaging becomes clear in this section. A diffraction-limited imaging
system is considered as a linear system in Section 10.8, and its linear system
properties are derived for coherent and incoherent imaging. One of these properties
is the optical transfer function. How it can be computed with a computer is the topic
of Section 10.9. All imaging systems have aberrations. They are described in
Section 10.10, especially in terms of Zernike polynomials.

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