WAVE OPTICAL ASPECTS OF LORENTZ MICROSCOPY
Abstract
The customary defocussed and Foucault modes of Lorentz microscopy are usually described in terms of geometric optics. Wohlleben has shown that geometric optics has a restricted range of validity, however; a more fundamental approach is provided by wave optics. The defocussed and Foucault modes may be discussed in terms of wave optics, and for the defocussed mode it can be shown explicitly that the geometric theory is simply the first approximation to the wave optics theory. Consideration of wave optics also leads to the proposal of two additional modes of Lorentz microscopy: Zernike phase contrast and interference microscopy; these modes cannot be described on the basis of geometric optics. The most fundamental problems in magnetic films which are amenable to study by Lorentz microscopy are investigations of the fine structures of domain walls and magnetization ripple. These problems are discussed in terms of wave optics for all four modes of Lorentz microscopy; in particular, the intensity distribution of the zero-width divergent domain wall is explicitly calculated for each mode. For practical experiments the importance of coherence, i.e., of the illumination source size, is emphasized, and the experimental aid of holography is suggested. Since the Wohlleben limit is valid for all four modes, however, there is no resolution advantage inherent in any one mode. The choice of modes for solution of the domain wall and ripple problems therefore depends upon experimental convenience.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- May 10, 1967
- Accession Number
- AD0652497
Entities
People
- M. S. Cohen
Organizations
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology