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A lens is a transmissive optical device that focuses or disperses a light beam by means of
refraction In physics, refraction is the redirection of a wave as it passes from one transmission medium, medium to another. The redirection can be caused by the wave's change in speed or by a change in the medium. Refraction of light is the most commo ...
. A simple lens consists of a single piece of transparent material, while a compound lens consists of several simple lenses (''elements''), usually arranged along a common axis. Lenses are made from materials such as
glass Glass is an amorphous (non-crystalline solid, non-crystalline) solid. Because it is often transparency and translucency, transparent and chemically inert, glass has found widespread practical, technological, and decorative use in window pane ...
or
plastic Plastics are a wide range of synthetic polymers, synthetic or Semisynthesis, semisynthetic materials composed primarily of Polymer, polymers. Their defining characteristic, Plasticity (physics), plasticity, allows them to be Injection moulding ...
and are ground, polished, or molded to the required shape. A lens can focus light to form an
image An image or picture is a visual representation. An image can be Two-dimensional space, two-dimensional, such as a drawing, painting, or photograph, or Three-dimensional space, three-dimensional, such as a carving or sculpture. Images may be di ...
, unlike a prism, which refracts light without focusing. Devices that similarly focus or disperse waves and radiation other than visible light are also called "lenses", such as microwave lenses, electron lenses, acoustic lenses, or explosive lenses. Lenses are used in various imaging devices such as
telescope A telescope is a device used to observe distant objects by their emission, Absorption (electromagnetic radiation), absorption, or Reflection (physics), reflection of electromagnetic radiation. Originally, it was an optical instrument using len ...
s, binoculars, and
camera A camera is an instrument used to capture and store images and videos, either digitally via an electronic image sensor, or chemically via a light-sensitive material such as photographic film. As a pivotal technology in the fields of photograp ...
s. They are also used as visual aids in glasses to correct defects of vision such as myopia and hypermetropia.


History

The word '' lens'' comes from , the Latin name of the lentil (a seed of a lentil plant), because a double-convex lens is lentil-shaped. The lentil also gives its name to a geometric figure. Some scholars argue that the archeological evidence indicates that there was widespread use of lenses in antiquity, spanning several millennia. The so-called Nimrud lens is a rock crystal artifact dated to the 7th century BCE which may or may not have been used as a magnifying glass, or a burning glass. Others have suggested that certain
Egyptian hieroglyphs Ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs ( ) were the formal writing system used in Ancient Egypt for writing the Egyptian language. Hieroglyphs combined Ideogram, ideographic, logographic, syllabic and alphabetic elements, with more than 1,000 distinct char ...
depict "simple glass meniscal lenses". The oldest certain reference to the use of lenses is from Aristophanes' play '' The Clouds'' (424 BCE) mentioning a burning-glass.
Pliny the Elder Gaius Plinius Secundus (AD 23/24 79), known in English as Pliny the Elder ( ), was a Roman Empire, Roman author, Natural history, naturalist, and naval and army commander of the early Roman Empire, and a friend of the Roman emperor, emperor Vesp ...
(1st century) confirms that burning-glasses were known in the Roman period. Pliny also has the earliest known reference to the use of a corrective lens when he mentions that
Nero Nero Claudius Caesar Augustus Germanicus ( ; born Lucius Domitius Ahenobarbus; 15 December AD 37 – 9 June AD 68) was a Roman emperor and the final emperor of the Julio-Claudian dynasty, reigning from AD 54 until his ...
was said to watch the gladiatorial games using an emerald (presumably concave to correct for nearsightedness, though the reference is vague). Both Pliny and
Seneca the Younger Lucius Annaeus Seneca the Younger ( ; AD 65), usually known mononymously as Seneca, was a Stoicism, Stoic philosopher of Ancient Rome, a statesman, a dramatist, and in one work, a satirist, from the post-Augustan age of Latin literature. Seneca ...
(3 BC–65 AD) described the magnifying effect of a glass globe filled with water.
Ptolemy Claudius Ptolemy (; , ; ; – 160s/170s AD) was a Greco-Roman mathematician, astronomer, astrologer, geographer, and music theorist who wrote about a dozen scientific treatises, three of which were important to later Byzantine science, Byzant ...
(2nd century) wrote a book on ''
Optics Optics is the branch of physics that studies the behaviour and properties of light, including its interactions with matter and the construction of optical instruments, instruments that use or Photodetector, detect it. Optics usually describes t ...
'', which however survives only in the Latin translation of an incomplete and very poor Arabic translation. The book was, however, received by medieval scholars in the Islamic world, and commented upon by Ibn Sahl (10th century), who was in turn improved upon by Alhazen ('' Book of Optics'', 11th century). The Arabic translation of Ptolemy's ''Optics'' became available in Latin translation in the 12th century ( Eugenius of Palermo 1154). Between the 11th and 13th century " reading stones" were invented. These were primitive plano-convex lenses initially made by cutting a glass sphere in half. The medieval (11th or 12th century) rock crystal Visby lenses may or may not have been intended for use as burning glasses. Spectacles were invented as an improvement of the "reading stones" of the high medieval period in Northern Italy in the second half of the 13th century. This was the start of the optical industry of grinding and polishing lenses for spectacles, first in Venice and Florence in the late 13th century, and later in the spectacle-making centres in both the
Netherlands , Terminology of the Low Countries, informally Holland, is a country in Northwestern Europe, with Caribbean Netherlands, overseas territories in the Caribbean. It is the largest of the four constituent countries of the Kingdom of the Nether ...
and
Germany Germany, officially the Federal Republic of Germany, is a country in Central Europe. It lies between the Baltic Sea and the North Sea to the north and the Alps to the south. Its sixteen States of Germany, constituent states have a total popu ...
. Spectacle makers created improved types of lenses for the correction of vision based more on empirical knowledge gained from observing the effects of the lenses (probably without the knowledge of the rudimentary optical theory of the day). The practical development and experimentation with lenses led to the invention of the compound optical microscope around 1595, and the
refracting telescope A refracting telescope (also called a refractor) is a type of optical telescope that uses a lens (optics), lens as its objective (optics), objective to form an image (also referred to a dioptrics, dioptric telescope). The refracting telescope d ...
in 1608, both of which appeared in the spectacle-making centres in the
Netherlands , Terminology of the Low Countries, informally Holland, is a country in Northwestern Europe, with Caribbean Netherlands, overseas territories in the Caribbean. It is the largest of the four constituent countries of the Kingdom of the Nether ...
. With the invention of the telescope and microscope there was a great deal of experimentation with lens shapes in the 17th and early 18th centuries by those trying to correct chromatic errors seen in lenses. Opticians tried to construct lenses of varying forms of curvature, wrongly assuming errors arose from defects in the spherical figure of their surfaces. Optical theory on
refraction In physics, refraction is the redirection of a wave as it passes from one transmission medium, medium to another. The redirection can be caused by the wave's change in speed or by a change in the medium. Refraction of light is the most commo ...
and experimentation was showing no single-element lens could bring all colours to a focus. This led to the invention of the compound achromatic lens by Chester Moore Hall in
England England is a Countries of the United Kingdom, country that is part of the United Kingdom. It is located on the island of Great Britain, of which it covers about 62%, and List of islands of England, more than 100 smaller adjacent islands. It ...
in 1733, an invention also claimed by fellow Englishman John Dollond in a 1758 patent. Developments in transatlantic commerce were the impetus for the construction of modern lighthouses in the 18th century, which utilize a combination of elevated sightlines, lighting sources, and lenses to provide navigational aid overseas. With maximal distance of visibility needed in lighthouses, conventional convex lenses would need to be significantly sized which would negatively affect the development of lighthouses in terms of cost, design, and implementation. Fresnel lens were developed that considered these constraints by featuring less material through their concentric annular sectioning. They were first fully implemented into a lighthouse in 1823.


Construction of simple lenses

Most lenses are ''spherical lenses'': their two surfaces are parts 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 forms an astigmatic lens. An example is eyeglass lenses that are used to correct astigmatism in someone's eye.


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. If both surfaces have the same radius of curvature, the lens is ''equiconvex''. 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''. Convex-concave lenses are most commonly used in corrective lenses, since the shape minimizes some aberrations. For a biconvex or plano-convex lens in a lower-index medium, a collimated beam of light passing through the lens converges to a spot (a ''focus'') behind the lens. In this case, the lens is called a ''positive'' or ''converging'' lens. For a thin lens in air, the distance from the lens to the spot is the
focal length The focal length of an Optics, optical system is a measure of how strongly the system converges or diverges light; it is the Multiplicative inverse, inverse of the system's optical power. A positive focal length indicates that a system Converge ...
of the lens, which is commonly represented by in diagrams and equations. An extended hemispherical lens is a special type of plano-convex lens, in which the lens's curved surface is a full hemisphere and the lens is much thicker than the radius of curvature. Another extreme case of a thick convex lens is a ball lens, whose shape is completely round. When used in novelty photography it is often called a "lensball". A ball-shaped lens has the advantage of being omnidirectional, but for most optical glass types, its focal point lies close to the ball's surface. Because of the ball's curvature extremes compared to the lens size, optical aberration is much worse than thin lenses, with the notable exception of chromatic aberration. For a biconcave or plano-concave lens in a lower-index medium, 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 emanate from a particular point on the axis in front of the lens. For a thin lens in air, the distance from this point to the lens is the focal length, though it is negative with respect to the focal length of a converging lens. The behavior reverses when a lens is placed in a medium with higher refractive index than the material of the lens. In this case a biconvex or plano-convex lens diverges light, and a biconcave or plano-concave one converges it. 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 (with a shorter radius than the convex surface) and is thinner at the centre than at the periphery. Conversely, a ''positive meniscus'' lens has a steeper convex surface (with a shorter radius than the concave surface) and is thicker at the centre than at the periphery. An ideal thin lens with two surfaces of equal curvature (also equal in the sign) would have zero
optical power In optics, optical power (also referred to as dioptric power, refractive power, focal power, focusing power, or convergence power) is the degree to which a lens, mirror, or other optical system converges or diverges light. It is equal to the ...
(as its focal length becomes infinity as shown in the lensmaker's equation), meaning that it would neither converge nor diverge light. All real lenses have a nonzero thickness, however, which makes a real lens with identical curved surfaces slightly positive. To obtain exactly zero optical power, a meniscus lens must have slightly unequal curvatures to account for the effect of the lens' thickness.


For a spherical surface

] For a single refraction for a circular boundary, the relation between object and its image in the paraxial approximation is given by \frac u + \frac v = \frac R where is the radius of the spherical surface, is the refractive index of the material of the surface, is the refractive index of medium (the medium other than the spherical surface material), u is the on-axis (on the optical axis) object distance from the line perpendicular to the axis toward the refraction point on the surface (which height is ''h''), and v is the on-axis image distance from the line. Due to paraxial approximation where the line of ''h'' is close to the vertex of the spherical surface meeting the optical axis on the left, u and v are also considered distances with respect to the vertex. Moving v toward the right infinity leads to the first or object focal length f_0 for the spherical surface. Similarly, u toward the left infinity leads to the second or image focal length f_i. \begin f_0 &= \frac R,\\ f_i &= \frac R \end Applying this equation on the two spherical surfaces of a lens and approximating the lens thickness to zero (so a thin lens) leads to the lensmaker's formula.


Derivation

Applying Snell's law on the spherical surface, n_1 \sin i = n_2 \sin r\,. Also in the diagram,\begin \tan (i - \theta) &= \frac hu \\ \tan (\theta - r) &= \frac hv \\ \sin \theta &= \frac hR \end, and using small angle approximation (paraxial approximation) and eliminating , , and , \frac v + \frac u = \frac R\,.


Lensmaker's equation

The (effective) focal length f of a spherical lens in air or vacuum for paraxial rays can be calculated from the lensmaker's equation: \frac = \left( n - 1 \right) \left \frac - \frac + \frac\ \right , where * \ n\ is the
refractive index In optics, the refractive index (or refraction index) of an optical medium is the ratio of the apparent speed of light in the air or vacuum to the speed in the medium. The refractive index determines how much the path of light is bent, or refrac ...
of the lens material; * \ R_1\ is the (signed, see below) radius of curvature of the lens surface closer to the light source; * \ R_2\ is the radius of curvature of the lens surface farther from the light source; and * \ d\ is the thickness of the lens (the distance along the lens axis between the two surface vertices). The focal length \ f\ is with respect to the principal planes of the lens, and the locations of the principal planes \ h_1\ and \ h_2\ with respect to the respective lens vertices are given by the following formulas, where it is a positive value if it is right to the respective vertex. \ h_1 = -\ \frac\ \ h_2 = -\ \frac\ The focal length \ f\ is positive for converging lenses, and negative for diverging lenses. The reciprocal of the focal length, \ \tfrac\ , is the
optical power In optics, optical power (also referred to as dioptric power, refractive power, focal power, focusing power, or convergence power) is the degree to which a lens, mirror, or other optical system converges or diverges light. It is equal to the ...
of the lens. If the focal length is in metres, this gives the optical power in dioptres (reciprocal metres). 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. Other properties of the lens, such as the aberrations are not the same in both directions.


Sign convention for radii of curvature and

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 a ''positive'' indicates a surface's center of curvature is further along in the direction of the ray travel (right, in the accompanying diagrams), while ''negative'' means that rays reaching the surface have already passed the center of curvature. Consequently, for external lens surfaces as diagrammed above, and indicate ''convex'' surfaces (used to converge light in a positive lens), while and indicate ''concave'' surfaces. The reciprocal of the radius of curvature is called the
curvature In mathematics, curvature is any of several strongly related concepts in geometry that intuitively measure the amount by which a curve deviates from being a straight line or by which a surface deviates from being a plane. If a curve or su ...
. A flat surface has zero curvature, and its radius of curvature is infinite.


Sign convention for other parameters

This convention is used in this article. Other conventions such as th
Cartesian sign convention
change the form of the equations.


Thin lens approximation

If is small compared to and then the approximation can be made. For a lens in air,   is then given by \ \frac \approx \left( n - 1 \right) \left \frac - \frac\ \right~.


Derivation

The spherical thin lens equation in paraxial approximation is derived here with respect to the right figure. The 1st spherical lens surface (which meets the optical axis at \ V_1\ as its vertex) images an on-axis object point ''O'' to the virtual image ''I'', which can be described by the following equation,\ \frac + \frac = \frac ~. For the imaging by second lens surface, by taking the above sign convention, \ u' = - v' + d\ and \ \frac + \frac = \frac ~. Adding these two equations yields \ \frac + \frac = \left( n_2 - n_1 \right) \left( \frac - \frac \right) + \frac ~. For the thin lens approximation where \ d \rightarrow 0\ , the 2nd term of the RHS (Right Hand Side) is gone, so \ \frac + \frac = \left( n_2 - n_1 \right) \left( \frac - \frac \right) ~. The focal length \ f\ of the thin lens is found by limiting \ u \rightarrow - \infty\ , \ \frac = \left( n_2 - n_1 \right) \left( \frac - \frac \right) \rightarrow \frac = \left( \frac - 1 \right) \left( \frac - \frac \right) ~. So, the Gaussian thin lens equation is \ \frac + \frac = \frac ~. For the thin lens in air or vacuum where \ n_1 = 1\ can be assumed, \ f\ becomes \ \frac = \left( n - 1 \right)\left(\frac - \frac \right)\ where the subscript of 2 in \ n_2\ is dropped.


Imaging properties

As mentioned above, a positive or converging lens in air focuses a collimated beam travelling along the lens axis to a spot (known as the focal point) at a distance from the lens. Conversely, a point source of light placed at the focal point is converted into a collimated beam by the lens. These two cases are examples of
image An image or picture is a visual representation. An image can be Two-dimensional space, two-dimensional, such as a drawing, painting, or photograph, or Three-dimensional space, three-dimensional, such as a carving or sculpture. Images may be di ...
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 from the lens is called the '' ''.


Lens equation

For paraxial rays, if the distances from an object to a spherical thin lens (a lens of negligible thickness) and from the lens to the image are and respectively, the distances are related by the (Gaussian) thin lens formula: = + \,. The right figure shows how the image of an object point can be found by using three rays; the first ray parallelly incident on the lens and refracted toward the second focal point of it, the second ray crossing the optical center of the lens (so its direction does not change), and the third ray toward the first focal point and refracted to the direction parallel to the optical axis. This is a simple ray tracing method easily used. Two rays among the three are sufficient to locate the image point. By moving the object along the optical axis, it is shown that the second ray determines the image size while other rays help to locate the image location. The lens equation can also be put into the "Newtonian" form: f^2 = x_1 x_2\,, where x_1 = S_1-f and x_2 = S_2-f\,. x_1 is positive if it is left to the front focal point F_1, and x_2 is positive if it is right to the rear focal point F_2. Because f^2 is positive, an object point and the corresponding imaging point made by a lens are always in opposite sides with respect to their respective focal points. (x_1 and x_2 are either positive or negative.) This Newtonian form of the lens equation can be derived by using a similarity between triangles ''P''1''P''O1''F''1 and ''L''3''L''2''F''1 and another similarity between triangles ''L''1''L''2''F''2 and ''P''2''P''02''F''2 in the right figure. The similarities give the following equations and combining these results gives the Newtonian form of the lens equation. \begin \frac = \frac \\ \frac = \frac \end The above equations also hold for thick lenses (including a compound lens made by multiple lenses, that can be treated as a thick lens) in air or vacuum (which refractive index can be treated as 1) if S_1, S_2, and f are with respect to the principal planes of the lens (f is the effective focal length in this case). This is because of triangle similarities like the thin lens case above; similarity between triangles ''P''1''P''O1''F''1 and ''L''3''H''1''F''1 and another similarity between triangles ''L''1H''2''F''2 and ''P''2''P''02''F''2 in the right figure. If distances or pass through a medium other than air or vacuum, then a more complicated analysis is required. If an object is placed at a distance from a positive lens of focal length , we will find an image at a distance according to this formula. If a screen is placed at a distance on the opposite side of the lens, an image is formed on it. This sort of image, which can be projected onto a screen or
image sensor An image sensor or imager is a sensor that detects and conveys information used to form an image. It does so by converting the variable attenuation of light waves (as they refraction, pass through or reflection (physics), reflect off objects) into s ...
, is known as a '' real image''. This is the principle of the
camera A camera is an instrument used to capture and store images and videos, either digitally via an electronic image sensor, or chemically via a light-sensitive material such as photographic film. As a pivotal technology in the fields of photograp ...
, and also of the human eye, in which the retina serves as the image sensor. The focusing adjustment of a camera adjusts , as using an image distance different from that required by this formula produces a defocused (fuzzy) image for an object at a distance of from the camera. Put another way, modifying causes objects at a different to come into perfect focus. In some cases, is negative, indicating that the image is formed on the opposite side of the lens from where those rays are being considered. Since the diverging light rays emanating from the lens never come into focus, and those rays are not physically present at the point where they to form an image, this is called a
virtual image In optics, the ''image'' of an object is defined as the collection of Focus (optics), focus points of Ray (optics), light rays coming from the object. A ''real image'' is the collection of focus points made by Vergence (optics), converging ray ...
. Unlike real images, a virtual image cannot be projected on a screen, but appears to an observer looking through the lens as if it were a real object at the location of that virtual image. Likewise, it appears to a subsequent lens as if it were an object at that location, so that second lens could again focus that light into a real image, then being measured from the virtual image location behind the first lens to the second lens. This is exactly what the eye does when looking through a magnifying glass. The magnifying glass creates a (magnified) virtual image behind the magnifying glass, but those rays are then re-imaged by the lens of the eye to create a ''real image'' on the retina. Using a positive lens of focal length , a virtual image results when , the lens thus being used as a magnifying glass (rather than if as for a camera). Using a negative lens () with a () can only produce a virtual image (), according to the above formula. It is also possible for the object distance to be negative, in which case the lens sees a so-called ''virtual object''. This happens when the lens is inserted into a converging beam (being focused by a previous lens) the location of its real image. In that case even a negative lens can project a real image, as is done by a Barlow lens. For a given lens with the focal length ''f'', the minimum distance between an object and the real image is 4''f'' (''S''1 = ''S''2 = 2''f''). This is derived by letting ''L'' = ''S''1 + ''S''2, expressing ''S''2 in terms of ''S''1 by the lens equation (or expressing ''S''1 in terms of ''S''2), and equating the derivative of ''L'' with respect to ''S''1 (or ''S''2) to zero. (Note that ''L'' has no limit in increasing so its extremum is only the minimum, at which the derivate of ''L'' is zero.)


Magnification

The linear '' magnification'' of an imaging system using a single lens is given by M = - \frac = \frac\ = - \frac where is the magnification factor defined as the ratio of the size of an image compared to the size of the object. The sign convention here dictates that if is negative, as it is for real images, the image is upside-down with respect to the object. For virtual images is positive, so the image is upright. This magnification formula provides two easy ways to distinguish converging () and diverging () lenses: For an object very close to the lens (), a converging lens would form a magnified (bigger) virtual image, whereas a diverging lens would form a demagnified (smaller) image; For an object very far from the lens (), a converging lens would form an inverted image, whereas a diverging lens would form an upright image. Linear magnification is not always the most useful measure of magnifying power. For instance, when characterizing a visual telescope or binoculars that produce only a virtual image, one would be more concerned with the angular magnification—which expresses how much larger a distant object appears through the telescope compared to the naked eye. In the case of a camera one would quote the plate scale, which compares the apparent (angular) size of a distant object to the size of the real image produced at the focus. The plate scale is the reciprocal of the focal length of the camera lens; lenses are categorized as long-focus lenses or wide-angle lenses according to their focal lengths. Using an inappropriate measurement of magnification can be formally correct but yield a meaningless number. For instance, using a magnifying glass of focal length, held from the eye and from the object, produces a virtual image at infinity of infinite linear size: . But the ' is 5, meaning that the object appears 5 times larger to the eye than without the lens. When taking a picture of the
moon The Moon is Earth's only natural satellite. It Orbit of the Moon, orbits around Earth at Lunar distance, an average distance of (; about 30 times Earth diameter, Earth's diameter). The Moon rotation, rotates, with a rotation period (lunar ...
using a camera with a lens, one is not concerned with the linear magnification Rather, the plate scale of the camera is about , from which one can conclude that the image on the film corresponds to an angular size of the moon seen from earth of about 0.5°. In the extreme case where an object is an infinite distance away, , and , indicating that the object would be imaged to a single point in the focal plane. In fact, the diameter of the projected spot is not actually zero, since
diffraction Diffraction is the deviation of waves from straight-line propagation without any change in their energy due to an obstacle or through an aperture. The diffracting object or aperture effectively becomes a secondary source of the Wave propagation ...
places a lower limit on the size of the point spread function. This is called the diffraction limit.


Table for thin lens imaging properties


Aberrations

Lenses do not form perfect images, and always introduce some degree of distortion or ''aberration'' that makes the image an imperfect replica of the object. Careful design of the lens system for a particular application minimizes the aberration. Several types of aberration affect image quality, including spherical aberration, coma, and chromatic aberration.


Spherical aberration

''Spherical aberration'' occurs because spherical surfaces are not the ideal shape for a lens, but 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 laterally 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. Spherical aberration can be minimised with normal lens shapes by carefully choosing the surface curvatures 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 source.


Coma

''Coma'', or ''comatic aberration'', derives its name from the
comet A comet is an icy, small Solar System body that warms and begins to release gases when passing close to the Sun, a process called outgassing. This produces an extended, gravitationally unbound atmosphere or Coma (cometary), coma surrounding ...
-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 . Rays that pass through the centre of a lens of focal length are focused at a point with distance 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'' (see each circle of the image in the below figure). 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.


Chromatic aberration

''Chromatic aberration'' is caused by the dispersion of the lens material—the variation of its
refractive index In optics, the refractive index (or refraction index) of an optical medium is the ratio of the apparent speed of light in the air or vacuum to the speed in the medium. The refractive index determines how much the path of light is bent, or refrac ...
, , with the wavelength of light. Since, from the formulae above, is dependent upon , it follows that light of different wavelengths is 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 with even better chromatic aberration correction, combined with improved spherical aberration correction. Apochromats are much more expensive than achromats. Different lens materials may also be used to minimise chromatic aberration, such as specialised 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 Diffraction is the deviation of waves from straight-line propagation without any change in their energy due to an obstacle or through an aperture. The diffracting object or aperture effectively becomes a secondary source of the Wave propagation ...
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

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. In a multiple-lens system, if the purpose of the system is to image an object, then the system design can be such that each lens treats the image made by the previous lens as an object, and produces the new image of it, so the imaging is cascaded through the lenses. As shown above, the Gaussian lens equation for a spherical lens is derived such that the 2nd surface of the lens images the image made by the 1st lens surface. For multi-lens imaging, 3rd lens surface (the front surface of the 2nd lens) can image the image made by the 2nd surface, and 4th surface (the back surface of the 2nd lens) can also image the image made by the 3rd surface. This imaging cascade by each lens surface justifies the imaging cascade by each lens. For a two-lens system the object distances of each lens can be denoted as s_ and s_, and the image distances as and s_ and s_. If the lenses are thin, each satisfies the thin lens formula \frac = \frac + \frac, If the distance between the two lenses is d, then s_ = d - s_. (The 2nd lens images the image of the first lens.) FFD (Front Focal Distance) is defined as the distance between the front (left) focal point of an optical system and its nearest optical surface vertex. If an object is located at the front focal point of the system, then its image made by the system is located infinitely far way to the right (i.e., light rays from the object is collimated after the system). To do this, the image of the 1st lens is located at the focal point of the 2nd lens, i.e., s_ = d - f_2 . So, the thin lens formula for the 1st lens becomes \frac = \frac + \frac \rightarrow FFD = \frac. BFD (Back Focal Distance) is similarly defined as the distance between the back (right) focal point of an optical system and its nearest optical surface vertex. If an object is located infinitely far away from the system (to the left), then its image made by the system is located at the back focal point. In this case, the 1st lens images the object at its focal point. So, the thin lens formula for the 2nd lens becomes \frac = \frac + \frac \rightarrow BFD = \frac. A simplest case is where thin lenses are placed in contact (d = 0). Then the combined focal length of the lenses is given by \frac = \frac + \frac\,. Since is the power of a lens with focal length , it can be seen that the powers of thin lenses in contact are additive. The general case of multiple thin lenses in contact is \frac =\sum_^N \frac where N is the number of lenses. If two thin lenses are separated in air by some distance , then the focal length for the combined system is given by \frac = \frac + \frac-\frac\,. As tends to zero, the focal length of the system tends to the value of given for thin lenses in contact. It can be shown that the same formula works for thick lenses if is taken as the distance between their principal planes. If the separation distance between two lenses is equal to the sum of their focal lengths (), then the FFD and BFD are infinite. This corresponds to a pair of lenses that transforms a parallel (collimated) beam into another collimated beam. This type of system is called an '' afocal system'', since it produces no net convergence or divergence of the beam. Two lenses at this separation form the simplest type of
optical telescope An optical telescope gathers and focus (optics), focuses light mainly from the visible spectrum, visible part of the electromagnetic spectrum, to create a magnification, magnified image for direct visual inspection, to make a photograph, or to co ...
. Although the system does not alter the divergence of a collimated beam, it does alter the (transverse) width of the beam. The magnification of such a telescope is given by M = -\frac\,, which is the ratio of the output beam width to the input beam width. Note the sign convention: a telescope with two convex lenses (, ) produces a negative magnification, indicating an inverted image. A convex plus a concave lens () produces a positive magnification and the image is upright. For further information on simple optical telescopes, see Refracting telescope § Refracting telescope designs.


Non spherical types

Cylindrical lenses have curvature along only one axis. They are used to focus light into a line, or to convert the elliptical light from a laser diode into a round beam. They are also used in motion picture anamorphic lenses. Aspheric lenses have at least one surface that is neither spherical nor cylindrical. The more complicated shapes allow such lenses to form images with less aberration than standard simple lenses, but they are more difficult and expensive to produce. These were formerly complex to make and often extremely expensive, but advances in technology have greatly reduced the manufacturing cost for such lenses. A Fresnel lens has its optical surface broken up into narrow rings, allowing the lens to be much thinner and lighter than conventional lenses. Durable Fresnel lenses can be molded from plastic and are inexpensive. Lenticular lenses are arrays of microlenses that are used in lenticular printing to make images that have an illusion of depth or that change when viewed from different angles. Bifocal lens has two or more, or a graduated, focal lengths ground into the lens. A gradient index lens has flat optical surfaces, but has a radial or axial variation in index of refraction that causes light passing through the lens to be focused. An axicon has a conical optical surface. It images a point source into a line the optic axis, or transforms a laser beam into a ring. Diffractive optical elements can function as lenses. Superlenses are made from negative index metamaterials and claim to produce images at spatial resolutions exceeding the diffraction limit. The first superlenses were made in 2004 using such a metamaterial for microwaves. Improved versions have been made by other researchers. the superlens has not yet been demonstrated at visible or near-
infrared Infrared (IR; sometimes called infrared light) is electromagnetic radiation (EMR) with wavelengths longer than that of visible light but shorter than microwaves. The infrared spectral band begins with the waves that are just longer than those ...
wavelengths. A prototype flat ultrathin lens, with no curvature has been developed.


Uses

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 refractive errors such as myopia, hypermetropia, presbyopia, and astigmatism. (See corrective lens, contact lens, eyeglasses,
intraocular lens An intraocular lens (IOL) is a lens (optics), lens implanted in the human eye, eye usually as part of a treatment for cataracts or for correcting other vision problems such as myopia, near-sightedness (myopia) and farsightedness, far-sightednes ...
.) 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 centres are placed over the eyeballs; their curvature may not be axially symmetric to correct for astigmatism. Sunglasses' lenses are designed to attenuate light; sunglass lenses that also correct visual impairments can be custom made. Other uses are in imaging systems such as monoculars, binoculars,
telescopes A telescope is a device used to observe distant objects by their emission, Absorption (electromagnetic radiation), absorption, or Reflection (physics), reflection of electromagnetic radiation. Originally, it was an optical instrument using len ...
,
microscope A microscope () is a laboratory equipment, laboratory instrument used to examine objects that are too small to be seen by the naked eye. Microscopy is the science of investigating small objects and structures using a microscope. Microscopic ...
s,
camera A camera is an instrument used to capture and store images and videos, either digitally via an electronic image sensor, or chemically via a light-sensitive material such as photographic film. As a pivotal technology in the fields of photograp ...
s and projectors. Some of these instruments produce a
virtual image In optics, the ''image'' of an object is defined as the collection of Focus (optics), focus points of Ray (optics), light rays coming from the object. A ''real image'' is the collection of focus points made by Vergence (optics), converging ray ...
when applied to the human eye; others produce a real image that can be captured on
photographic film Photographic film is a strip or sheet of transparent film base coated on one side with a gelatin photographic emulsion, emulsion containing microscopically small light-sensitive silver halide crystals. The sizes and other characteristics of the ...
or an optical sensor, or can be viewed on a screen. In these devices lenses are sometimes paired up with curved mirrors to make a
catadioptric system A catadioptric optical system is one where refraction and Reflection (physics), reflection are combined in an optical system, usually via lens (optics), lenses (dioptrics) and curved mirrors (catoptrics). Catadioptric combinations are used in foc ...
where the lens's spherical aberration corrects the opposite aberration in the mirror (such as Schmidt and meniscus correctors). Convex lenses produce an image of an object at infinity at their focus; if the sun is imaged, much of the visible and infrared light incident on the lens is concentrated into the small image. A large lens creates enough intensity to burn a flammable object at the focal point. Since ignition can be achieved even with a poorly made lens, lenses have been used as burning-glasses for at least 2400 years.
A modern application is the use of relatively large lenses to concentrator photovoltaics, concentrate solar energy on relatively small
photovoltaic cell A solar cell, also known as a photovoltaic cell (PV cell), is an electronic device that converts the energy of light directly into electricity by means of the photovoltaic effect.
s, harvesting more energy without the need to use larger and more expensive cells. Radio astronomy and
radar Radar is a system that uses radio waves to determine the distance ('' ranging''), direction ( azimuth and elevation angles), and radial velocity of objects relative to the site. It is a radiodetermination method used to detect and track ...
systems often use dielectric lenses, commonly called a lens antenna to refract
electromagnetic radiation In physics, electromagnetic radiation (EMR) is a self-propagating wave of the electromagnetic field that carries momentum and radiant energy through space. It encompasses a broad spectrum, classified by frequency or its inverse, wavelength ...
into a collector antenna. Lenses can become scratched and abraded. Abrasion-resistant coatings are available to help control this.


See also

* Anti-fogging treatment of optical surfaces * Back focal plane * Bokeh * Cardinal point (optics) * Caustic (optics) * Eyepiece * F-number * Gravitational lens * Lens (anatomy) * List of lens designs *
Numerical aperture In optics, the numerical aperture (NA) of an optical system is a dimensionless number that characterizes the range of angles over which the system can accept or emit light. By incorporating index of refraction in its definition, has the property ...
* Optical coatings * Optical lens design * Photochromic lens * Prism (optics) * Ray tracing * Ray transfer matrix analysis


Notes


References


Bibliography

* Chapters 5 & 6. * *


External links


A chapter from an online textbook on refraction and lenses

''Thin Spherical Lenses ''
(.pdf) o
Project PHYSNET
.

* Article o
Ancient Egyptian lenses
*
The Use of Magnifying Lenses in the Classical World
* (with 21 diagrams)


Simulations



– Concave and Convex Lenses
OpticalRayTracer
– Open source lens simulator (downloadable java)
Animations demonstrating lens
by QED {{Authority control Optical components