We investigate the transverse spatial profile of down-converted light
produced by noncollinear, degenerate, Type-I spontaneous parametric
down-conversion in two types of nonlinear crystals. We find that the pattern
produced by one crystal, beta barium borate (BBO), produces a circular
down-conversion pattern while the other crystal, bismuth triborate (BiBO)
produces an elliptical pattern. We show this difference is due to the
angle-independent refractive index experienced by the daughter photons in BBO,
while they experience an angle-dependent refractive index in BiBO. We image the
transverse spatial profile of the generated light to determine the eccentricity
produced by each crystal and develop a model to explain our observation. Among
other things, this model predicts that there is a wavelength for which the
eccentricity from BiBO is nearly zero. Finally, we discuss how the elliptical
ring pattern produced in BiBO potentially affects polarization entanglement for
experimental setups that collect biphotons around the entire down-conversion
ring. We show that the quality of polarization entanglement as measured by the
overlap integral of the spectrum of the two rings, can remain high (>99.4%)
around the entire ring at the expense of decreased biphoton rate