Page:Light waves and their uses.djvu/45

Rh the magnification is proportional to the ratio of the distances from object and image respectively to the center of the lens; hence in the microscope an error in determining the position of the image means a much smaller error in the determination of the position of the point source. This error could be diminished indefinitely by increasing the magnifying power, were it not for the attendant loss of light and the fact that the light waves, though very minute, are not infinitesimally small. In fact, the same diffraction effects again limit the possibility of indefinite accuracy of measurement. What, then, is the new limit?

Let p, Fig. 22, represent the center of the geometrical image of a luminous point. This will be a point of maximum brightness, because all parts of the concave wave which converges toward p reach this point at the same time, and therefore in the same phase. Let us consider an adjacent point q. The parts of the converging wave are no longer at equal