Difference between revisions of Optics related math

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When the object is brought even closer to the lens (<math>s < f</math>) the emerging rays are now diverging. When substituted into the equation, <math>s' < 0</math>. This is interpreted as a '''virtual image''', ''behind'' the lens. This is the mode in which reading glasses (plus lenses) are used - the eye is able to focus on the virtual image which appears to be further away than the real source object.
When the object is brought even closer to the lens (<math>s < f</math>) the emerging rays are now diverging. When substituted into the equation, <math>s' < 0</math>. This is interpreted as a '''virtual image''', ''behind'' the lens. This is the mode in which reading glasses (plus lenses) are used - the eye is able to focus on the virtual image which appears to be further away than the real source object.
===Diverging lens===


A diverging lens behaves in a similar way, but for distant objects - the light rays incident from the source object are refracted outwards so that they are diverging even faster. Again, a virtual focus is said to form behind the lens. The thin lens equation still works as long as you use negative numbers to describe both the (virtual) image location and the focal length.
A diverging lens behaves in a similar way, but for distant objects - the light rays incident from the source object are refracted outwards so that they are diverging even faster. Again, a virtual focus is said to form behind the lens. The thin lens equation still works as long as you use negative numbers to describe both the (virtual) image location and the focal length.

Revision as of 15:02, 30 July 2020

Math guy with glasses.gif

Here's a page with maths related to diopters and glasses.

You don't really need to know any of this stuff to improve your eyesight, but it's good to know for deeper understanding Face-smile.svg

Lenses

Lens3.svg

The image shows a typical converging lens. The three rays drawn each have an interesting characteristic:

  • the top ray enters the lens parallel with the optic axis, and so passes through the focal point on the other side
  • the middle ray passes through the optical centre of the lens, and is undeviated
  • the bottom ray passes through the focal point on the incident side, and so emerges parallel to the optic axis

The thin lens equation

where

  • = focal length of lens
  • = distance to object ( on the picture)
  • = distance to image ( on the picture)

Infinity

The term object at infinity is often used. When is substituted into the thin lens equation, that term vanishes, so that the focal length is then just the image location. For any sufficiently large object distance, the contribution from the reciprocal becomes negligible.

As the object approaches the lens, the outgoing rays converge less and less, until the object reaches the focus of the lens (), and the transmitted light is parallel - we say it "focuses at ", which means it never comes together into a focus. (This can also be described as a virtual image at - see below.)

Virtual image

When the object is brought even closer to the lens () the emerging rays are now diverging. When substituted into the equation, . This is interpreted as a virtual image, behind the lens. This is the mode in which reading glasses (plus lenses) are used - the eye is able to focus on the virtual image which appears to be further away than the real source object.

Diverging lens

A diverging lens behaves in a similar way, but for distant objects - the light rays incident from the source object are refracted outwards so that they are diverging even faster. Again, a virtual focus is said to form behind the lens. The thin lens equation still works as long as you use negative numbers to describe both the (virtual) image location and the focal length.

The corrective lens for myopia is a diverging lens. It works by forming a virtual image of distant objects, and it is this virtual image that the near-sighted eye is able to focus on.

Diopters are inverse meters

Intuitively, the more powerful a lens is, the more rapidly it can bring incoming light to a focus. So the power is defined as the inverse of the focal length.

See Also Diopters

See Also cm Measurement

Remember that 100cm = 1m.

conversely

Calculating correction

How to calculate the strength of corrective lenses

From 20/20 prescription

The advantage of calculating the strength of differentials as a reduction from full prescription is that you don't have to worry about the cylinder element - just preserve that part.

Assuming you are wearing your full 20/20 correction (or even if you are fortunate to be emmetropic), the eye wants to receive parallel incident light to be relaxed. So we can use a simple geometric argument to calculate the strength of the (converging) lens which should be interposed : an object placed at the focus of a converging lens will result in parallel outgoing light ("focus at infinity"). This parallel light is exactly what the (fully corrected) eye wants to receive.

But rather than actually placing such a lens in front of your full prescription, simply add that value (being careful with signs).

ie if your screen is 50cm away, that corresponds to a power of . So that's the value you'd add to your full prescription (resulting in a less-negative lens).

From blur horizon of naked eye

Note that this does not take either cylinder (astigmatism) or vertex distance into account.

Your cm measurement gives you the distance the eye can see when it is fully relaxed. You want a (diverging) corrective lens which puts a virtual image of the source object there. So we can solve the thin lens equation to find for an arbitrary source object distance given .

For full correction, that's easy : and so . E.g. if your blur horizon is 20cm you need a -5D correction.

For differentials to use a screen at, say, 50cm, just use . (Which is consistent with the previous version, adding 2D to the calculated full correction of -5D.)

Point of refraction

See also Refraction


Visual acuity equation

Note: 5Arcminutes = 20/20

Set up proportion:

Visual acuity (mm/metres)

Visual acuity (in/feet)

With text that we are familiar with, the brain may clear up that text more than our vision would actually allow.[1]

Average axial length accomodation/rate of change

If someone with typical eyes wanted to adapt say 20/20 to .25 less normalized within 3-4 months would need to decrease axial length 0.083mm about 0.92microns/day - 0.69microns/day average Credit: Mark Podowski

Converting from Glasses to Contact Lens Prescription or vice-versa

References