Spherical Lenses Flashcards

1
Q

What do convex lenses do to incident light

A

convergence of incident light

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2
Q

What do concave lenses do to incident light

A

divergence of incident light

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3
Q

How to calculate the total vergence power

A

depends on the vergence power of each surface and the thickness of the lens. Most of the lenses used in ophthalmology are thin lenses, and for a thin lens the thickness factor may be ignored.
Thus the total power of a thin lens is the sum of the two surface powers

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4
Q

What is the nodal/principal point

A

The point at which the principal plane and principal axis intersect. Rays of light passing through the nodal point are undeviated.

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5
Q

What is the first principal focus F1

A

The first principal focus, F1, is the point of origin of rays which, after refraction by the lens, are parallel to the principal axis. The distance F1N is the first focal length f1

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6
Q

What is the second principal focus F2

A

Incident light parallel to the principal axis is converged to or diverged from the second principal focus, F2. The distance F2N is the second focal length

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7
Q

Conventional sign of F2 for a convex lens

A

positive

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8
Q

Conventional sign of F2 for a concave lens

A

negative

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9
Q

Thin lens formula

A

1/v- 1/u=1/f2

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10
Q

What is u and v in the thin lens formula

A

v is the distance of the image from the principal point; u is the distance of the object from the principal point; and f2 is the second focal length

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11
Q

How to construct a ray diagram for spherical lenses

A

1) A ray from the top of the object which passes through the principal point undeviated
2) A ray parallel to the principal axis, which after refraction passes through (convex) or away from (concave) the second principal focus

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12
Q

For a convex lens where is the image formed if the Object is located outside the focal point F1

A

Image real, inverted and outside F2

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13
Q

For a convex lens where is the image formed if the object is located at F1

A

Image virtual, erect and at infinity

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14
Q

For a convex lens where is the image formed if the object is located inside F1

A

Image virtual erect magnified and further from lens than object

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15
Q

For a concave lens where is the image formed if the object is at ANY position

A

Image virtual erect diminished and inside F2

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16
Q

What is the formula to calculate the dioptric power of the lens

A

the reciprocal of the second focal length. The reciprocal of the second focal length expressed in metres, gives the vergence power of the lens in dioptres (D)

17
Q

Formula for linear magnification

A

I/O= v/u
I= image size
O= object size
v=distance of image from principal plane
u=distance of object from principal plane

18
Q

Magnifying power of a magnifying lens

A

M=F/4 where F is the power of lens in dioptres
eg a x8 louple has a lens power of +32Dioptres

19
Q

What is lens decentration

A

Use of a non-axial portion of a lens to gain a prismatic effect is called decentration of the lens

20
Q

What does poor lens centration lead to

A

especially high power lenses, may produce an unwanted prismatic effect. This is a frequent cause of spectacle intolerance, especially in patients with aphakia or high myopia

21
Q

Formula to predict prismatic power gained by lens decentration

A

P=F x D
P=prismatic power in prism dioptres
F= lens power in dioptres
D= decentration in cm

22
Q

Mechanism of spherical aberration

A

increasing prismatic power of the more peripheral parts of a spherical lens is the underlying mechanism of spherical aberration
Furthermore, it causes the troublesome ring scotoma and jack-in-the-box effect which give rise to great difficulty to those wearing high-power spectacle lenses

23
Q
A