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Assuming an Airy disc with one ring, does the dark ring around the central disc have the same area as the disc and bright ring? Do the bright and dark areas balance out exactly? Is that how energy is conserved?sophiecentaur said:Energy is not 'transferred'. The Airy Disc is just a diffraction pattern which is formed by contributions from all parts of what would be the image. We start by considering simple 'interference' between ideal point sources but the image of a star (for example) is due to contributions from all over the objective lens. The resulting Airy pattern is given by an Integral of all contributions. The amplitudes in all directions all scale according to the brightness of the source (star). The energy is spread over an infinite range (in theory) but in practice it's confined to the usual disc image.
And how long you are prepared to wait for an exposure.The outer rings can in fact coincide with another very faint star and that can determine the resolution between to stars.