Volume 28, Issue 4 pp. 1031-1040
research papers

Diaboloidal mirrors: algebraic solution and surface shape approximations

Valeriy V. Yashchuk

Corresponding Author

Valeriy V. Yashchuk

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Advanced Light Source, 1 Cyclotron Rd, Berkeley, CA, 94720 USA

Valeriy V. Yashchuk, e-mail: [email protected]Search for more papers by this author
Kenneth A. Goldberg

Kenneth A. Goldberg

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Advanced Light Source, 1 Cyclotron Rd, Berkeley, CA, 94720 USA

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Ian Lacey

Ian Lacey

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Advanced Light Source, 1 Cyclotron Rd, Berkeley, CA, 94720 USA

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Wayne R. McKinney

Wayne R. McKinney

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Advanced Light Source, 1 Cyclotron Rd, Berkeley, CA, 94720 USA

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Manuel Sanchez del Rio

Manuel Sanchez del Rio

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Advanced Light Source, 1 Cyclotron Rd, Berkeley, CA, 94720 USA

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Howard A. Padmore

Howard A. Padmore

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Advanced Light Source, 1 Cyclotron Rd, Berkeley, CA, 94720 USA

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First published: 02 June 2021

Abstract

A new type of optical element that can focus a cylindrical wave to a point focus (or vice versa) is analytically described. Such waves are, for example, produced in a beamline where light is collimated in one direction and then doubly focused by a single optic. A classical example in X-ray optics is the collimated two-crystal monochromator, with toroidal mirror refocusing. The element here replaces the toroid, and in such a system provides completely aberration free, point-to-point imaging of rays from the on-axis source point. We present an analytic solution for the mirror shape in its laboratory coordinate system with zero slope at the centre, and approximate solutions, based on bending an oblique circular cone and a bent right circular cylinder, that may facilitate fabrication and metrology.

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