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25 January, 12:03

A. Calculate the diffraction limit of the human eye, assuming a wide-open pupil so that your eye acts like a lens with diameter 0.8 centimeter, for visible light of 500-nanometer wavelength.

Express your answer using two significant figures.

B. How does this compare to the diffraction limit of a 10-meter telescope?

Express your answer using two significant figures.

C. Now remember that humans have two eyes that are approximately 7 centimeters apart. Estimate the diffraction limit for human vision, assuming that your "optical interferometer" is just as good as one eyeball as large as the separation of two regular eyeballs.

Express your answer using two significant figures.

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  1. 25 January, 15:43
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    A. The Dawes limit tells us that the resolving power is equal to 11.6 / d, where d is the diameter of the eye’s pupil in units of centimeters. The eye's pupil can dialate to approximately 7 mm, or 0.7 cm. So 11.6 /.7 = 16.5 arc seconds, or about a quarter arc minute ~ 17 arc seconds

    Although, the standard answer for what people can really see is about 1 arc minute.

    B. It is considered as linear, so given a 10 meter telescope (10,000 mm):

    10000 / 7 = 1428 times better for the 10 meter scope ~ 1400 times better (in 2 significant figures)

    C. For a 7 cm interferometer, that is just similar to a 7 cm scope. Therefore we would expect

    11.6 / 7 = 1.65 arc seconds ~ 1.7 arc seconds

    T his value is what we typically can get from a 7 cm scope.
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