Book contents
- Introduction to Lens Design
- Introduction to Lens Design
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Classical Imaging, First-Order Imaging, and Imaging Aberrations
- 3 Aspheric Surfaces
- 4 Thin Lenses
- 5 Ray Tracing
- 6 Radiometry in a Lens System
- 7 Achromatic and Athermal Lenses
- 8 Combinations of Achromatic Doublets
- 9 Image Evaluation
- 10 Lens Tolerancing
- 11 Using Lens Design Software
- 12 Petzval Portrait Objective, Cooke Triplet, and Double Gauss Lens
- 13 Lens System Combinations
- 14 Ghost Image Analysis
- 15 Designing with Off-the-Shelf Lenses
- 16 Mirror Systems
- 17 Miniature Lenses
- 18 Zoom Lenses
- Book part
- Glossary
- Further Reading on Lens Design
- Index
- References
13 - Lens System Combinations
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 September 2019
- Introduction to Lens Design
- Introduction to Lens Design
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Classical Imaging, First-Order Imaging, and Imaging Aberrations
- 3 Aspheric Surfaces
- 4 Thin Lenses
- 5 Ray Tracing
- 6 Radiometry in a Lens System
- 7 Achromatic and Athermal Lenses
- 8 Combinations of Achromatic Doublets
- 9 Image Evaluation
- 10 Lens Tolerancing
- 11 Using Lens Design Software
- 12 Petzval Portrait Objective, Cooke Triplet, and Double Gauss Lens
- 13 Lens System Combinations
- 14 Ghost Image Analysis
- 15 Designing with Off-the-Shelf Lenses
- 16 Mirror Systems
- 17 Miniature Lenses
- 18 Zoom Lenses
- Book part
- Glossary
- Further Reading on Lens Design
- Index
- References
Summary
An optical engineer is not only concerned with the design of a single lens system, but also in combining several lens systems. An optical system may comprise several individual lens systems. These lens systems must be combined to meet the overall optical system specifications. Often each lens system serves to relay an image or a pupil of the previous system to a new location. In combining lens systems, several effects can take place due to image and/or pupil aberrations. Being aware of such effects is key to design, analyze, or debug a combination of lens systems. For example, a telescope can be considered as the combination of an objective lens, an image erecting system, an eyepiece, and the human eye. To properly form an image on the eye’s retina, these subsystems must be properly combined. In this chapter we discuss combining lens systems, pupil aberrations, and optical relays.
- Type
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- Information
- Introduction to Lens Design , pp. 153 - 163Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2019