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mrbling
Apr10-04, 11:32 AM
Q:Spy planes fly at extremely high altitudes (25.3 km) to avoid interception. Their cameras are reportedly able to discern features as small as 5.20 cm. What must be the minimum aperture of the camera lens to afford this resolution? (Use lambda = 550 nm.)

I first found theta.. .052m/2 = .026m (since .026 above and below the center = .052m)
tan theta = .026m/25300m, and theta = 4.578x10^-5

Then plugging into the rayleigh criterion for resolution limit of theta = 1.22lamda/D, where D is the diameter of the objective lens (same as aperture of camera??)... I get
theta = 1.22lamda/D
4.578x10^-5 = 1.22(550x10^-9)/D
D= .0147m, which is incorrect..

anyone know where I went wrong?
Thanks!

gnome
Apr10-04, 06:18 PM
I get d = .326m using
sin \theta = 1.22\frac{\lambda}{d}
and letting \theta = arctan \left( \frac{.052}{25300}\right)
so:
d = \frac{1.22x5.5x10^{-7}}{sin({arctan \left( \frac{.052}{25300}\right)})} = .326m

Not sure though. Do you know what the answer is supposed to be?

mrbling
Apr11-04, 01:52 PM
Gnome,
Your answer was the correct one. I tried your process earlier, but I think I was confusing the theta since it was given in radians as opposed to doing sin theta for the degrees..

Thanks!

gnome
Apr12-04, 10:50 AM
You can get the same answer using the \theta=sin\theta small angle approximation, but then you have to be consistent & do the arctan calculation in radians also.

So \theta = arctan \left(\frac{.026}{25300}\right) = 2.0553x10^{-6}

and d = \frac{1.22x5.5x10^{-7}}{\theta} = .326 m

krab
Apr12-04, 01:17 PM
Gnome's answer in slightly more legible LaTeX:

You can get the same answer using the \theta=\sin\theta small angle approximation, but then you have to be consistent & do the arctan calculation in radians also.

So

\theta = \arctan \left(\frac{.026}{25300}\right) = 2.0553\times 10^{-6}

and

d = \frac{1.22\times 5.5\times 10^{-7}}{\theta} = .326\,\mbox{m}