Coherent illumination of an optically rough surface creates random phase variations in the reflected electric field. Free-space propagation converts these phase variations into irradiance variations in both the pupil and image planes, known as pupil- and image-plane speckle. Infrared imaging systems are often parameterized by the quantity Fλ/d, which relates the cutoff frequencies passed by the optical diffraction MTF to the frequencies passed by the detector MTF. We present both analytical expressions and Monte-Carlo wave-optics simulations to determine the relationship between image-plane speckle contrast and the first-order system parameters utilized in Fλ/d (focal length, aperture size, wavelength, and detector size). For designers of active imaging systems, this paper provides input on speckle mitigation using Fλ/d to consider in system design.
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