ambigousphoton Posted July 30, 2010 Posted July 30, 2010 Hi everyone, I have an optics question that I hope someone could help a poor chemist out with. I have a Xenon lamp that directs most of the white light in a liquid light guide that then comes out and is collimated at 1" with a lens of the same size. If I wanted to collimate the beam at say 1/4", what is the best way of selecting the appropriate lens to use? There seem to be a bunch of lens equations and I'm not sure which to use for a collimating application. For what its worth my point source is like 0.125" and I think my beam divergence is something like 25.5 degrees. (0.125" goes to 4" beam when viewed 4" away.) Thanks so much for your help!
Klaynos Posted July 30, 2010 Posted July 30, 2010 The xenon lamp is not a point source, it will never be perfectly collimated. I can give you a good method for creating a more collimated beam than you would otherwise have if you require better collimation than you have. As for reducing your beam width, you have two options, first using a shorter focal length lens closer to the source. Or using a telescope, that is two lenses with different focal lengths (f1 and f2), you place the long focal length lens first and the second ~f1+f2 away, the exact distance will depend on your source. This will reduce your beam width by f1/f2, so if 2f2 = f1. you will have a beam that is half as wide. (you'll want to check that I've not used that method in well over 2 years).
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