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My ultimate goal is to understand why the spatial coherence of a wave increases with distance from the wave source. From what I have read though, there seems to be conflicting definitions of spatial coherence which lead me in different directions.

Over here at RP-Photonics, Spatial Coherence is defined as "a fixed phase relationship between the field at different locations". In Chapter 12 of Basics of Coherence theory from Purdue (linked at the end of the post), Spatial Coherence is defined as "the correlation of the phase of a wave between different locations in space." The same source then goes on to say that the spatial coherence of a wave refers to the distance over which the wave fronts remain flat. These definitions and the implication seem to contradict each other though. For suppose we have 4 in-phase and monochromatic spherical wave emitters displaced from each by a few wave lengths as shown below. Text

Then for any two points in the wave field (like the two probe points in the image), there will be a "fixed phase relationship". No matter were I place the two probes, I will always get 2 sine waves of the same frequency which may be in-phase or out-of-phase, but the phase difference between them will remain fixed in time provided the probes are kept in place regardless of how far or close they are to the sources or from each other. Thus, if spatial coherence is defined as a fixed phase relationship between two points, then the spatial coherence of a wave does not increase as we move further from its source, it simply stays the same. But notice that if we take a high degree of spatial coherence to mean "the distance over which the wave fronts remain flat", then it is clear that the spatial coherence of the wave in my image does in fact increase with distance from the source. How can this be if for any two points in the field, we will always have a fixed phase relationship?

Given these facts, is my image an example of a spatially coherent wave field? If so, does the degree of its spatial coherence increase the further we move away from the source and why?

Basics of coherence theory link below: https://www.physics.purdue.edu/webapps/index.php/course_document/index/phys322/1460/25/11076#:~:text=1)%20For%20producing%20stable%20pattern,pattern%2C%20coherent%20sources%20are%20required.

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Spatial coherence is usually described in terms of a coherence length. This is the distance over which a fixed relationship is maintained. Where fixed means the difference is small enough to ignore for your purpose. So not just fixed, but also roughly the same phase relationship.

In your picture, there are regions along the right edge where interference is constructive and produces sharp light and dark bands. As you move toward the source, you find a region where it is less constructive, and produces fuzzy bands. You might pick the length of a region of sharp bands as the spatial coherence length.

Near the sources, the length of these regions is shorter.

Coherence length defined this way is not a precise number. You can make is more precise by specifying how much the phase can change before you consider it to be no longer the same.

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  • $\begingroup$ Thanks for the great answer. Okay so by "fixed phase relationship", they mean that the difference in phase between any two points on a plane that is perpendicular to the direction of propagation, remains relatively constant even if the probes are moved further apart, right? So is it correct to say that an array of equal spaced and in-phase sources (like those in my image) produce a wave field that is spatially-incoherent near them but becomes progressively more spatially-coherent the further we move away from the sources? $\endgroup$ Commented Sep 6, 2022 at 7:32
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    $\begingroup$ It does become more spatially coherent as you move away. People often talk about spatial coherence along the bean because it is useful. It is related to coherence time, the time a single point will see a stable phase relationship. It tells you how long your interferometer can be. But it is possible you are interested in lighting up an object with coherent light. You might be interested in spatial coherence in a transverse direction. $\endgroup$
    – mmesser314
    Commented Sep 6, 2022 at 14:26

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