Frank L. Pedrotti, Leno M. Pedrotti, Leno S. Pedrotti

#Optics
#Physics
#Engineering
Introduction to Optics is now available in a re-issued edition from Cambridge University Press. Designed to offer a comprehensive and engaging introduction to intermediate and upper level undergraduate physics and engineering students, this text also allows instructors to select specialized content to suit individual curricular needs and goals. Specific features of the text, in terms of coverage beyond traditional areas, include extensive use of matrices in dealing with ray tracing, polarization, and multiple thin-film interference; three chapters devoted to lasers; a separate chapter on the optics of the eye; and individual chapters on holography, coherence, fiber optics, interferometry, Fourier optics, nonlinear optics, and Fresnel equations
Table of Contents
1 Nature of Light
2 Geomet rical Optics
3 Opt ical Instrumentation
4 Wave Equations
5 Superposition of Waves
6 Properties of Lasers
7 Interference of Light
8 Optical Interferometry
9 Coherence
10 Fiber Opt ics
11 Fraunhofer Diffraction
12 The Diffraction Grating
13 Fresnel Diffraction
14 Mat rix Treatment of Polarization
15 Production of Polarized Light
16 Holography
17 Optical Detectors and Displays
18 Matrix Methods in Paraxial Optics
19 Optics of the Eye
20 Aberration Theory
21 Fourier Optics
22 Theory of Multilayer Films
23 Fresnel Equations
24 Nonlinear Optics and the Modulation of Light
25 Optical Properties of Materials
26 Laser Operation
27 Characteristics of Laser Beams
About the Authors
Frank L. Pedrotti, SJ (1932–2010) was a member of the Society of Jesus and served on the faculty at a number of institutions including Marquette University from 1977–1994. He received a Ph.D. in Physics from the University of Cincinnati in 1962. His research areas included solid state physics and laser optics and he taught and developed courses across the undergraduate curriculum. His course notes served as the basis for the first edition of the text Introduction to Optics that he co-authored with his brother, Leno S. Pedrotti.
Leno M. Pedrotti is a Professor of Physics at the University of Dayton, where he joined the faculty in 1987, after completing his Ph.D. at the University of New Mexico in 1986. He has published papers on a variety of topics in theoretical quantum optics, including the quantum theory of the laser, microcavity lasers, nonclassical states of light, and atom/field/cavity interactions. He has taught courses that span the undergraduate physics curriculum as well as selected graduate electro-optics courses.
Leno S. Pedrotti (1927–2008) was a Professor of Physics at the Air Force Institute of Technology (AFIT) and Chief Scientist and Senior Vice President at the Center for Occupational Research and Development (CORD). He earned a Ph.D. in Physics from the University of Cincinnati in 1961. He joined AFIT in 1951, where he served as chair of the Physics Department from 1964–1982. At CORD he spearheaded the development of technical education materials for high-school and college students. His research areas included solid state physics and laser optics. He was a fellow of the Optical Society of America.









