Terrywoodenpic
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I'm not, I'm describing fourier optics through self-diffraction at apertures. The lens defines the wavefront as curved, creating the focus. The diffraction then occurs through the self interference of the wavefront as it propagates to the focus. This image formation theory explains why the rays from the periphery increase the resolution if the system. The edges are not, repeat, not the source of diffraction. The spatial extent of the wavefront is. This is not me making stuff up, this is part of how I design, build and operate adaptive optics compensated super-resolution microscopes. Go back and read my earlier posts, you might learn something.
Fourier optics describes things very differntly to classical optics. And in away not exactly understandable to a lay man with out the necessary mathematics and concepts.
The classical view is used in most explanations to do with telescopes, and camera optics.
I am in no position to judge why both seem to give adaquate answers in their own fields.
Sixty odd years ago, light was seen as a wave in the eather. To day we have some understanding about the behaviour of photons. The various theories explain why and how they move as they do. I rather doubt our understanding is complete
It would seem that working with microscope optics is involved with a whole different level, in terms of the various forms of diffraction and no doubt extremes of lenses resolution too. And probably quantum optics along side fourier.