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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

Proper
collimation
ensures
that
light
from
a
distant
object
is
focused
to
a
sharp
point
in
the
focal
plane.
Misaligned
optics
introduce
aberrations
such
as
coma
and
astigmatism.
Various
tools,
including
Cheshire
eyepieces,
laser
collimators,
and
sight
tubes,
are
used
to
adjust
the
mirrors.
by
absorbing
or
blocking
off-axis
components.
Collimators
restrict
the
beam's
cross-section
and
reduce
stray
radiation,
protecting
equipment
and
patients
and
improving
experimental
or
imaging
results.
In
radiography,
X-ray
collimation
lowers
patient
dose
and
improves
contrast
by
limiting
the
beam
to
the
region
of
interest.
desired
axis
with
minimal
divergence.