Collimation
Collimation is the process of aligning the components of a beam so that the emitted or propagated rays share a common axis and travel with minimal angular spread. In optics, a collimated beam consists of light rays that are essentially parallel. Collimation is achieved with devices called collimators, which may be lenses, diaphragms, or apertures that remove off-axis rays. A perfectly collimated beam is idealized; real beams have finite divergence determined by source quality, wavelength, and optical quality.
In astronomy, collimation refers to aligning the optical elements of a telescope, particularly telescopes with mirrors.
In particle physics and radiation therapy, collimation describes shaping a beam of charged particles or photons
Overall, collimation is a unifying concept across disciplines: aligning or shaping a beam to travel along a