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Optical Lens
A lens is an optical device with perfect or approximate
axial symmetry which transmits and refracts light,
converging or diverging the beam. A simple lens is a lens
consisting of a single optical element. A compound lens is
an array of simple lenses (elements) with a common axis; the
use of multiple elements allows more optical aberrations to
be corrected than is possible with a single element.
Manufactured lenses are typically made of glass or
transparent plastic. Elements which refract electromagnetic
radiation outside the visual spectrum are also called
lenses: for instance, a microwave lens can be made from
paraffin wax.
The archaic spelling lense is sometimes seen, but
Merriam-Webster's medical dictionary is the only major
dictionary that considers this to be correct.
The Golden Gate Bridge refracted in rain droplets, which act
as lenses
The oldest lens artefact is the Nimrud lens, which is over
three thousand years old, dating back to ancient Assyria.
David Brewster proposed that it may have been used as a
magnifying glass, or as a burning-glass to start fires by
concentrating sunlight. Assyrian craftsmen made intricate
engravings, and could have used such a lens in their work.
Another early reference to magnification dates back to
ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs in the 8th century BC, which
depict "simple glass meniscal lenses".
The earliest written records of lenses date to Ancient
Greece, with Aristophanes' play The Clouds (424 BC)
mentioning a burning-glass (a biconvex lens used to focus
the sun's rays to produce fire). The writings of Pliny the
Elder (23–79) also show that burning-glasses were known to
the Roman Empire, and mentions what is arguably the earliest
use of a corrective lens: Nero was said to watch the
gladiatorial games using an emerald (presumably concave to
correct for myopia, though the reference is vague). Both
Pliny and Seneca the Younger (3 BC–65) described the
magnifying effect of a glass globe filled with water.
The word lens comes from the Latin name of the lentil,
because a double-convex lens is lentil-shaped. The genus of
the lentil plant is Lens, and the most commonly eaten
species is Lens culinaris. The lentil plant also gives its
name to a geometric figure.
The Arabian physicist and mathematician, Ibn Sahl
(c.940–c.1000), used what is now known as Snell's law to
calculate the shape of lenses. Ibn al-Haytham (965–1038),
known in the West as Alhazen, wrote the first major optical
treatise, the Book of Optics, which described how the lens
in the human eye formed an image on the retina. The earliest
"historical proof of a magnifying device, a convex lens
forming a magnified image," also dates back to the Book of
Optics. Its translation into Latin in the 12th century was
instrumental to the invention of eyeglasses in 13th century
Italy.
Excavations at the Viking harbour town of Fröjel, Gotland,
Sweden discovered in 1999 the rock crystal Visby lenses,
produced by turning on pole-lathes at Fröjel in the 11th to
12th century, with an imaging quality comparable to that of
1950s aspheric lenses. The Viking lenses concentrate
sunlight enough to ignite fires.
Widespread use of lenses did not occur until the use of
reading stones in the 11th century and the invention of
spectacles, probably in Italy in the 1280s. Nicholas of Cusa
is believed to have been the first to discover the benefits
of concave lenses for the treatment of myopia in 1451.
The Abbe sine condition, due to Ernst Abbe (1860s), is a
condition that must be fulfilled by a lens or other optical
system in order for it to produce sharp images of off-axis
as well as on-axis objects. It revolutionized the design of
optical instruments such as microscopes, and helped to
establish the Carl Zeiss company as a leading supplier of
optical instruments.
Construction of simple lenses
Image of the city of Seattle as seen through a lens.
Most lenses are spherical lenses: their two surfaces are
parts, with the same axis as each other, of the surfaces of
spheres. Each surface can be convex (bulging outwards from
the lens), concave (depressed into the lens), or planar
(flat). The line joining the centres of the spheres making
up the lens surfaces is called the axis of the lens.
Typically the lens axis passes through the physical centre
of the lens, because of the way they are manufactured.
Lenses may be cut or ground after manufacturing to give them
a different shape or size. The lens axis may then not pass
through the physical centre of the lens.
Toric or sphero-cylindrical lenses have surfaces with two
different radii of curvature in two orthogonal planes. They
have a different focal power in different meridians. This is
a form of deliberate astigmatism.
More complex are aspheric lenses. These are lenses where one
or both surfaces have a shape that is neither spherical nor
cylindrical. Such lenses can produce images with much less
aberration than standard simple lenses.
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Types of simple lenses
Lenses are classified by the curvature of the two optical
surfaces. A lens is biconvex (or double convex, or just
convex) if both surfaces are convex, A lens with two concave
surfaces is biconcave (or just concave). If one of the
surfaces is flat, the lens is plano-convex or plano-concave
depending on the curvature of the other surface. A lens with
one convex and one concave side is convex-concave or
meniscus. It is this type of lens that is most commonly used
in corrective lenses.
If the lens is biconvex or plano-convex, a collimated or
parallel beam of light travelling parallel to the lens axis
and passing through the lens will be converged (or focused)
to a spot on the axis, at a certain distance behind the lens
(known as the focal length). In this case, the lens is
called a positive or converging lens.
If the lens is biconcave or plano-concave, a collimated beam
of light passing through the lens is diverged (spread); the
lens is thus called a negative or diverging lens. The beam
after passing through the lens appears to be emanating from
a particular point on the axis in front of the lens; the
distance from this point to the lens is also known as the
focal length, although it is negative with respect to the
focal length of a converging lens.
Convex-concave (meniscus) lenses can be either positive or
negative, depending on the relative curvatures of the two
surfaces. A negative meniscus lens has a steeper concave
surface and will be thinner at the centre than at the
periphery. Conversely, a positive meniscus lens has a
steeper convex surface and will be thicker at the centre
than at the periphery. An ideal thin lens with two surfaces
of equal curvature would have zero optical power, meaning
that it would neither converge nor diverge light. All real
lenses have a nonzero thickness, however, which affects the
optical power. To obtain exactly zero optical power, a
meniscus lens must have slightly unequal curvatures to
account for the effect of the lens' thickness.
Lensmaker's equation
The focal length of a lens in air can be calculated from the
lensmaker's equation:
where
f is the focal length of the lens,
n is the refractive index of the lens material,
R1 is the radius of curvature of the lens surface closest to
the light source,
R2 is the radius of curvature of the lens surface farthest
from the light source, and
d is the thickness of the lens (the distance along the lens
axis between the two surface vertices).
Sign convention of lens radii R1 and R2
Main article: Radius of curvature (optics)
The signs of the lens' radii of curvature indicate whether
the corresponding surfaces are convex or concave. The sign
convention used to represent this varies, but in this
article if R1 is positive the first surface is convex, and
if R1 is negative the surface is concave. The signs are
reversed for the back surface of the lens: if R2 is positive
the surface is concave, and if R2 is negative the surface is
convex. If either radius is infinite, the corresponding
surface is flat.
Thin lens equation
If d is small compared to R1 and R2, then the thin lens
approximation can be made. For a lens in air, f is then
given by
The focal length f is positive for converging lenses, and
negative for diverging lenses. The value 1/f is known as the
optical power of the lens, measured in dioptres, which are
units equal to inverse meters (m−1).
Lenses have the same focal length when light travels from
the back to the front as when light goes from the front to
the back, although other properties of the lens, such as the
aberrations are not necessarily the same in both directions.
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Imaging properties
As mentioned above, a positive or converging lens in air
will focus a collimated beam travelling along the lens axis
to a spot (known as the focal point) at a distance f from
the lens. Conversely, a point source of light placed at the
focal point will be converted into a collimated beam by the
lens. These two cases are examples of image formation in
lenses. In the former case, an object at an infinite
distance (as represented by a collimated beam of waves) is
focused to an image at the focal point of the lens. In the
latter, an object at the focal length distance from the lens
is imaged at infinity. The plane perpendicular to the lens
axis situated at a distance f from the lens is called the
focal plane.
If the distances from the object to the lens and from the
lens to the image are S1 and S2 respectively, for a lens of
negligible thickness, in air, the distances are related by
the thin lens formula:
.
What this means is that, if an object is placed at a
distance S1 along the axis in front of a positive lens of
focal length f, a screen placed at a distance S2 behind the
lens will have a sharp image of the object projected onto
it, as long as S1 > f (if the lens-to-screen distance S2 is
varied slightly, the image will become less sharp). This is
the principle behind photography. The image in this case is
known as a real image.
Note that if S1 < f, S2 becomes negative, the image is
apparently positioned on the same side of the lens as the
object. Although this kind of image, known as a virtual
image, cannot be projected on a screen, an observer looking
through the lens will see the image in its apparent
calculated position. A magnifying glass creates this kind of
image.
The magnification of the lens is given by:
,
where M is the magnification factor; if |M|>1, the image is
larger than the object. Notice the sign convention here
shows that, if M is negative, as it is for real images, the
image is upside-down with respect to the object. For virtual
images, M is positive and the image is upright.
In the special case that S1 = ∞, then S2 = f and M = −f / ∞
= 0. This corresponds to a collimated beam being focused to
a single spot at the focal point. The size of the image in
this case is not actually zero, since diffraction effects
place a lower limit on the size of the image (see Rayleigh
criterion).
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The formulas above may also be used for negative (diverging)
lens by using a negative focal length (f), but for these
lenses only virtual images can be formed.
For the case of lenses that are not thin, or for more
complicated multi-lens optical systems, the same formulas
can be used, but S1 and S2 are interpreted differently. If
the system is in air or vacuum, S1 and S2 are measured from
the front and rear principal planes of the system,
respectively. Imaging in media with an index of refraction
greater than 1 is more complicated, and is beyond the scope
of this article.
Aberrations
Main article: Aberration in optical systems
Lenses do not form perfect images, and there is always some
degree of distortion or aberration introduced by the lens
which causes the image to be an imperfect replica of the
object. Careful design of the lens system for a particular
application ensures that the aberration is minimized. There
are several different types of aberration which can affect
image quality.
Spherical aberration
Spherical aberration occurs because spherical surfaces are
not the ideal shape with which to make a lens, but they are
by far the simplest shape to which glass can be ground and
polished and so are often used. Spherical aberration causes
beams parallel to, but distant from, the lens axis to be
focused in a slightly different place than beams close to
the axis. This manifests itself as a blurring of the image.
Lenses in which closer-to-ideal, non-spherical surfaces are
used are called aspheric lenses. These were formerly complex
to make and often extremely expensive, but advances in
technology have greatly reduced the manufacturing cost for
such lenses. Spherical aberration can be minimised by
careful choice of the curvature of the surfaces for a
particular application: for instance, a plano-convex lens
which is used to focus a collimated beam produces a sharper
focal spot when used with the convex side towards the beam.
Coma
Another type of aberration is coma, which derives its name
from the comet-like appearance of the aberrated image. Coma
occurs when an object off the optical axis of the lens is
imaged, where rays pass through the lens at an angle to the
axis θ. Rays which pass through the centre of the lens of
focal length f are focused at a point with distance f tan θ
from the axis. Rays passing through the outer margins of the
lens are focused at different points, either further from
the axis (positive coma) or closer to the axis (negative
coma). In general, a bundle of parallel rays passing through
the lens at a fixed distance from the centre of the lens are
focused to a ring-shaped image in the focal plane, known as
a comatic circle. The sum of all these circles results in a
V-shaped or comet-like flare. As with spherical aberration,
coma can be minimised (and in some cases eliminated) by
choosing the curvature of the two lens surfaces to match the
application. Lenses in which both spherical aberration and
coma are minimised are called bestform lenses.
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Chromatic aberration
Chromatic aberration is caused by the dispersion of the lens
material—the variation of its refractive index n with the
wavelength of light. Since, from the formulae above, f is
dependent upon n, it follows that different wavelengths of
light will be focused to different positions. Chromatic
aberration of a lens is seen as fringes of colour around the
image. It can be minimised by using an achromatic doublet
(or achromat) in which two materials with differing
dispersion are bonded together to form a single lens. This
reduces the amount of chromatic aberration over a certain
range of wavelengths, though it does not produce perfect
correction. The use of achromats was an important step in
the development of the optical microscope. An apochromat is
a lens or lens system which has even better correction of
chromatic aberration, combined with improved correction of
spherical aberration. Apochromats are much more expensive
than achromats.
Different lens materials may also be used to minimize
chromatic aberration, such as specialized coatings or lenses
made from the crystal fluorite. This naturally occurring
substance has the highest known Abbe number, indicating that
the material has low dispersion.
Other types of aberration
Other kinds of aberration include field curvature, barrel
and pincushion distortion, and astigmatism.
Aperture diffraction
Even if a lens is designed to minimize or eliminate the
aberrations described above, the image quality is still
limited by the diffraction of light passing through the
lens' finite aperture. A diffraction-limited lens is one in
which aberrations have been reduced to the point where the
image quality is primarily limited by diffraction under the
design conditions.
Compound lenses
See also: Photographic lens, Doublet (lens), and Achromat
Simple lenses are subject to the optical aberrations
discussed above. In many cases these aberrations can be
compensated for to a great extent by using a combination of
simple lenses with complementary aberrations. A compound
lens is a collection of simple lenses of different shapes
and made of materials of different refractive indices,
arranged one after the other with a common axis.
The simplest case is where lenses are placed in contact: if
the lenses of focal lengths f1 and f2 are "thin", the
combined focal length f of the lenses is given by
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Since 1/f is the power of a lens, it can be seen that the
powers of thin lenses in contact are additive.
If two thin lenses are separated in air by some distance d,
the focal length for the combined system is given by
.
The distance from the second lens to the focal point of the
combined lenses is called the back focal length (BFL).
.
As d tends to zero, the value of the BFL tends to the value
of f given for thin lenses in contact.
If the separation distance is equal to the sum of the focal
lengths (d = f1+f2), the combined focal length and BFL are
infinite. This corresponds to a pair of lenses that
transform a parallel (collimated) beam into another
collimated beam. This type of system is called afocal, since
it produces no net convergence or divergence of the beam.
Two lenses at this separation form the simplest type of
optical telescope. Although the system does not alter the
divergence of a collimated beam, it does alter the width of
the beam. The magnification of such a telescope is given by
,
which is the ratio of the input beam width to the output
beam width. Note the sign convention: a telescope with two
convex lenses (f1 > 0, f2 > 0) produces a negative
magnification, indicating an inverted image. A convex plus a
concave lens (f1 > 0 > f2) produces a positive magnification
and the image is upright.
Uses of lenses
A single convex lens mounted in a frame with a handle or
stand is a magnifying glass.
Lenses are used as prosthetics for the correction of visual
impairments such as myopia, hyperopia, presbyopia, and
astigmatism. (See corrective lens, contact lens,
eyeglasses.) Most lenses used for other purposes have strict
axial symmetry; eyeglass lenses are only approximately
symmetric. They are usually shaped to fit in a roughly oval,
not circular, frame; the optical centers are placed over the
eyeballs; their curvature may not be axially symmetric to
correct for astigmatism. Sunglasses lenses may be designed
to attenuate light without refraction.
Another use is in imaging systems such as a monocular,
binoculars, telescope, spotting scope, telescopic gun sight,
theodolite, microscope, camera (photographic lens) and
projector. Some of these instruments produce a virtual image
when applied to the human eye; others produce a real image
which can be captured on photographic film or an optical
sensor.
Convex lenses produce an image of an object at infinity at
their focus; if the sun is imaged, all the infrared energy
incident on the lens is concentrated on the small image. A
large lens will concentrate enough energy to heat an
inflammable object on which the image falls to burning
point. Such lenses, which do not need to be even
approximately optically accurate, have been used as
burning-glasses for hundreds of years. A modern application
is the use of relatively large lenses to concentrate solar
energy on relatively small photovoltaic cells, harvesting
more energy without the need to use larger, more expensive,
cells.
Radio astronomy and radar systems often use dielectric
lenses, commonly called a lens antenna to refract
electromagnetic radiation into a collector antenna. The
Square Kilometre Array radio telescope, scheduled to be
operational by 2020[1], will employ such lenses to get a
collection area nearly 30 times greater than any previous
antenna.
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See also
Aberration in optical systems
Anti-fogging treatment of optical surfaces
Axicon
Back focal plane
Bokeh
Cardinal point (optics)
Corrective lens
Eyepiece
F-number
Fresnel lens
Gradient index lens
Gravitational lens
History of lensmaking
Lens (anatomy)
List of lens designs
Microscope
Microlens
Numerical aperture
Optical coatings
Optical lens design
Optical lenticular
Photochromic lens
Photographic lens
Prime lens
Prism (optics)
Ray tracing
Superlens
Telescope
Zoom lens
References
General
Hecht, Eugene (1987). Optics, 2nd ed., Addison Wesley. ISBN
0-201-11609-X. Chapters 5 & 6.
Greivenkamp, John E. (2004). Field Guide to Geometrical
Optics, SPIE Field Guides vol. FG01, SPIE. ISBN
0-8194-5294-7.
Footnotes
^ Brians, Paul (2003). Common Errors in English.
^ a b Whitehouse, David (1999-07-01). "World's oldest
telescope?", BBC News. Retrieved on 2008-05-10.
^ D. Brewster (1852). "On an account of a rock-crystal lens
and decomposed glass found in Niniveh" (in German). Die
Fortschritte der Physik. Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft.
^ a b Kriss, Timothy C. & Kriss, Vesna Martich (April 1998),
"History of the Operating Microscope: From Magnifying Glass
to Microneurosurgery", Neurosurgery 42(4): 899–907,
doi:10.1097/00006123-199804000-00116
^ Pliny the Elder, The Natural History (trans. John Bostock)
Book XXXVII, Chap. 10.
^ Pliny the Elder, The Natural History (trans. John Bostock)
Book XXXVII, Chap. 16
^ Rashed, R. (1990). "A pioneer in anaclastics: Ibn Sahl on
burning mirrors and lenses." Isis, 81, 464–491.
^ Greivenkamp, p.14; Hecht §6.1
^ Hecht, § 5.2.3
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