Diffraction Limit Calculator

Choose Rayleigh, Abbe, or Airy modes for your setup and parameter presets. Enter wavelength and aperture, then get resolution in arcseconds, microns, plus exports.

Calculator

Pick a criterion that matches your optical system.
Used for telescope and camera-style calculations.
Adds linear separation using the small-angle approximation.
Reset

Example data table

Scenario λ D / NA / f/# Typical result Notes
Telescope (visible) 550 nm D = 100 mm θ ≈ 1.38 arcsec Rayleigh angular criterion for a circular aperture.
Microscope (oil) 550 nm NA = 1.30 d ≈ 0.26 µm Rayleigh lateral resolution, high-NA objective.
Camera lens 550 nm f/# = 8 Airy diameter ≈ 10.7 µm Useful when comparing pixel pitch to spot size.

Values are approximate and assume ideal circular pupils.

Formulas used

  • Rayleigh angular resolution (circular aperture): θ = 1.22 · λ / D (θ in radians, λ wavelength, D aperture diameter).
  • Microscope lateral resolution: d = k · λ / NA where k = 0.61 (Rayleigh) or k = 0.5 (Abbe), and NA = n · sin(α).
  • Airy disk at the focal plane: r = 1.22 · λ · (f/#), diameter = 2.44 · λ · (f/#).

These relations assume diffraction-limited performance, a circular pupil, and monochromatic light. Aberrations, misalignment, and atmospheric turbulence can enlarge real-world spots.

How to use this calculator

  1. Select the calculation mode that matches your instrument.
  2. Enter the wavelength and choose its unit.
  3. For telescopes/cameras, enter aperture; for microscopes, enter NA or compute it.
  4. Optional: add a target distance to estimate linear separation from θ.
  5. Press Calculate to view results above the form.
  6. Use the CSV/PDF buttons to export the most recent result.

Professional notes on diffraction limits

1) Why diffraction sets a hard floor

Any finite pupil spreads light into an Airy pattern. Even a perfect lens cannot focus a point into an infinitely small dot. The practical consequence is a minimum angular or spatial separation needed to distinguish two features, regardless of magnification.

2) Rayleigh criterion for circular apertures

For a circular aperture, the first minimum occurs at θ = 1.22·λ/D. At λ = 550 nm and D = 100 mm, θ ≈ 6.7×10-6 rad, which is about 1.38 arcseconds. Larger D improves resolution linearly, while longer wavelengths reduce it.

3) From angle to real-world separation

For distant targets, the small-angle approximation converts angular resolution into a linear distance: s ≈ θ·L. For the same 100 mm aperture at 1 km, the limit is roughly 6.7 mm. This is useful for inspection optics, ranging systems, and field tests.

4) Microscopes depend on numerical aperture

In microscopy, the limiting factor is the collection cone rather than a simple diameter. The numerical aperture is NA = n·sin(α), with typical air objectives around 0.95 and oil immersion commonly 1.30–1.40. Higher NA increases detail without requiring shorter wavelengths.

5) Abbe and Rayleigh in the lab

Two common lateral-resolution estimates are Abbe d = λ/(2·NA) and Rayleigh d = 0.61·λ/NA. With λ = 550 nm and NA = 1.30, Abbe gives ~0.21 µm and Rayleigh ~0.26 µm. Use consistent criteria when comparing objectives or publications.

6) Airy disk size versus sensor pixels

At the focal plane, the Airy diameter is 2.44·λ·(f/#). At λ = 550 nm and f/8, the diameter is ~10.7 µm. If pixel pitch is 3.9 µm, the diffraction blur spans ~2.7 pixels, so stopping down may reduce sharpness even when depth of field improves.

7) When real systems miss the theoretical limit

Diffraction is only one part of image quality. Aberrations, focus error, vibration, atmospheric seeing, and scattering can dominate. A common engineering approach is to compare the predicted diffraction spot with measured point spread data and track the ratio as a performance indicator.

8) Using this calculator for design decisions

Start by selecting the mode that matches your hardware. Enter wavelength bands you care about, then sweep aperture, NA, or f-number to see how limits scale. Export results for documentation, and keep criteria consistent across comparisons and tests.

FAQs

1) What does “diffraction-limited” mean?

A system is diffraction-limited when aberrations are small enough that the Airy pattern sets the dominant blur, so resolution follows the wavelength and aperture-based formulas rather than lens imperfections.

2) Which wavelength should I enter for white light?

Use the band that matters for your detector or filter. For visible imaging, 550 nm is a common reference. For RGB sensors, evaluate each channel or a weighted average for your application.

3) Why is the Rayleigh constant 1.22?

For a circular pupil, diffraction produces an Airy pattern whose first zero occurs at 1.22·λ/D in angle. That constant comes from the first root of the Bessel function describing the pattern.

4) Can NA be greater than 1?

Yes. In immersion microscopy, the medium refractive index n exceeds 1, so NA = n·sin(α) can exceed 1. Air objectives typically stay below 1 because n≈1 for air.

5) Should I use Abbe or Rayleigh for microscopes?

Either is acceptable, but be consistent. Abbe is slightly more optimistic than Rayleigh. Rayleigh often matches two-point distinguishability, while Abbe is popular for periodic structures and teaching contexts.

6) How does f-number relate to aperture diameter?

F-number is f/D, the focal length divided by the entrance pupil diameter. Smaller f/# means a larger aperture, smaller diffraction spots, and higher light throughput, but may increase aberrations in real lenses.

7) Why doesn’t magnification improve resolution?

Magnification enlarges the image but does not change the diffraction blur already formed by the optics. To resolve finer detail, you need a larger aperture, higher NA, or a shorter wavelength.

Accurate diffraction estimates help you choose better optical systems.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.