Book description
Unlike the first edition, which was more a collection of lens designs for use in larger projects, the 2nd edition of Modern Lens Design is an optical “how-to.” Delving deep into the mechanics of lens design, optics legend Warren J. Smith reveals time-tested methods for designing top-quality lenses. He deals with lens design software, primarily OSLO, by far the current market leaders, and provides 7 comprehensive worked examples, all new to this edition. With this book in hand, there’s no lens an optical engineer can’t design.
Table of contents
- Cover Page
- Modern Lens Design
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- Preface
- Chapter 1. Introduction
-
Chapter 2. Automatic Lens Design: Managing the Lens Design Program
- 2.1 Optimization
- 2.2 The Merit Function
- 2.3 Local Minima
- 2.4 The Landscape Lens
- 2.5 Types of Merit Functions
- 2.6 Stagnation
- 2.7 Generalized Simulated Annealing
- 2.8 Considerations about Variables for Optimization
- 2.9 How to Increase the Speed or Field of a System and Avoid Ray Failure Problems
- 2.10 Test Plate Fits, Melt Fits, Thickness Fits, and Reverse Aberration Fits
- 2.11 Spectral Weighting
- 2.12 How to Get Started
-
Chapter 3. Improving a Design
- 3.1 Lens Design Tip Sheet: Standard Improvement Techniques
- 3.2 Glass Changes: Index and V-value
- 3.3 Splitting Elements
- 3.4 Separating a Cemented Doublet
- 3.5 Compounding an Element
- 3.6 Vignetting and Its Uses
- 3.7 Eliminating a Weak Element—the Concentric Problem
- 3.8 Balancing Aberrations
- 3.9 The Symmetrical Principle
- 3.10 Aspheric Surfaces
- Chapter 4. Evaluation: How Good Is This Design?
- Chapter 5. Lens Design Data
-
Chapter 6. Telescope Objectives
- 6.1 The Thin Airspaced Doublet
- 6.2 Merit Function for a Telescope Objective
- 6.3 The Design of an f/7 Cemented Doublet Telescope Objective
- 6.4 Spherochromatism
- 6.5 Zonal Spherical Aberration
- 6.6 Induced Aberrations
- 6.7 Three-Element Objectives
- 6.8 Secondary Spectrum (Apochromatic Systems)
- 6.9 The Design of an f/7 Apochromatic Triplet
- 6.10 The Diffractive Surface in Lens Design
- 6.11 A Final Note
- Chapter 7. Eyepieces and Magnifiers
-
Chapter 8. Cooke Triplet Anastigmats
- 8.1 Airspaced Triplet Anastigmats
- 8.2 Glass Choice
- 8.3 Vertex Length and Residual Aberrations
- 8.4 Other Design Considerations
- 8.5 A Plastic, Aspheric Triplet Camera Lens
- 8.6 Camera Lens Anastigmat Design “from Scratch”—The Cooke Triplet
- 8.7 Possible Improvements to Our “Basic” Triplet
- 8.8 The Rare Earth (Lanthanum) Glasses
- 8.9 Aspherizing the Surfaces
- 8.10 Increasing the Element Thickness
- Chapter 9. Split Triplets
- Chapter 10. The Tessar, Heliar, and Other Compounded Triplets
- Chapter 11. Double-Meniscus Anastigmats
-
Chapter 12. The Biotar or Double-Gauss Lens
- 12.1 The Basic Six-Element Version
- 12.2 Twenty-Eight Things That Every Lens Designer Should Know About the Double-Gauss/Biotar Lens
- 12.3 The Seven-Element Biotar—Split-Rear Crown
- 12.4 The Seven-Element Biotar—Broken Contact Front Doublet
- 12.5 The Seven-Element Biotar—One Compounded Outer Element
- 12.6 The Eight-Element Biotar
- 12.7 A “Doubled Double-Gauss” Relay
- Chapter 13. Telephoto Lenses
- Chapter 14. Reversed Telephoto (Retrofocus and Fish-Eye) Lenses
- Chapter 15. Wide-Angle Lenses with Negative Outer Elements
- Chapter 16. The Petzval Lens; Head-up Display Lenses
- Chapter 17. Microscope Objectives
- Chapter 18. Mirror and Catadioptric Systems
- Chapter 19. Infrared and Ultraviolet Systems
- Chapter 20. Zoom Lenses
- Chapter 21. Projection TV Lenses and Macro Lenses
- Chapter 22. Scanner/f-θ, Laser Disk and Collimator Lenses
- Chapter 23. Tolerance Budgeting
-
Chapter 24. Formulary
- 24.1 Sign Conventions, Symbols, and Definitions
- 24.2 The Cardinal Points
- 24.3 Image Equations
- 24.4 Paraxial Ray Tracing (Surface by Surface)
- 24.5 Invariants
- 24.6 Paraxial Ray Tracing (Component by Component)
- 24.7 Two-Component Relationships
- 24.8 Third-Order Aberrations—Surface Contributions
- 24.9 Third-Order Aberrations—Thin Lens Contributions: The G-Sum Equations
- 24.10 Stop Shift Equations
- 24.11 Third-Order Aberrations—Contributions from Aspheric Surfaces
- 24.12 Conversion of Aberrations to Wavefront Deformation (Optical Path Difference)
- Glossary
- References
- Index
- footnote
Product information
- Title: Modern Lens Design, 2nd Edition
- Author(s):
- Release date: November 2004
- Publisher(s): McGraw-Hill
- ISBN: 9780071777261
You might also like
book
Lens Design Fundamentals, 2nd Edition
Thoroughly revised and expanded to reflect the substantial changes in the field since its publication in …
book
Light and Lens, 2nd Edition
Light & Lens: Photography in the Digital Age is a groundbreaking introductory book that clearly and …
book
Handbook of Optical Design, 3rd Edition
This classroom-tested reference is an invaluable resource for students, engineers, and scientists in the field of …
book
The Manual of Photography, 10th Edition
The tenth edition of The Manual of Photography is an indispensable textbook for anyone who is …