Obliquity effects in interference microscopes
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A theoretical analysis is made of the influence of oblique rays on the fringes produced with interference microscopes. The convergency of the light, which is determined by the numerical aperture of the objective, results in the fringes being displaced from the position for ideally collimated light at normal incidence. The analysis accounts fairly well for some recent measurements of step heights with microscopes of different numerical apertures by Tolman and Wood.(1) The correction due to obliquity is of the order of 10% and over a limited range of step heights, a simple correction rule of α2/4 per unit is satisfactory to about 2%, where α = sin-1 (n.a.). The more rigorous formula shows a non-linear relation between obliquity-correction and step-height.
[1] J. Gates,et al. Fringe spacing in interference microscopes , 1956 .
[2] D. Hadley,et al. Temperature and pressure measurements in an over-compression cloud chamber , 1956 .
[3] J. G. Wood,et al. Fringe spacing in interference microscopes , 1956 .
[4] B. Thornton. The Effects of Collimation and Oblique Incidence in Length Interferometers. II. , 1955 .
[5] Cf Bruce,et al. The Effects of Collimation and Oblique Incidence in Length Interferometers. I. , 1955 .