OP - Chromatic Aberrations - Week 11 Flashcards

1
Q

What wavelength/colour light would you prefer to design your optical system for?

A

Yellow light – about 485nm

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2
Q

Does lens power differ with wavelength?

A

Yes. Short wavelength bends more (higher power)

I.e there’s a difference in refractive index and image point for different wavelengths

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3
Q

When can you get BOTH transverse and longitudinal chromatic aberration?

A

For OFF-AXIS object points

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4
Q

Difference between longitudinal and transverse aberrations?

A

Longitudinal - different colours focus on different planes (ie different focal lengths)

Transverse - different colours focus at different heights

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5
Q

The moon.

A

If you are observing the moon through a telescope you’ll see that the edge of the moon is all weirdly coloured. Is due to transverse chromatic aberration

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6
Q

Effect of aperture stop position on transverse aberration:

A

When the aperture stop is AT THE LENS: there is NO Transverse aberration

PPR is going through a nodal point (no refraction)

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7
Q

Advantage of Galilean telescope?

A

Can cancel out longitudinal chromatic aberration due to the negative power of the eye lens

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8
Q

Does a Keplerian telescope experience transverse chromatic aberration?

A

NOT FROM THE OBJECTIVE LENS. This is because the objective lens is the aperture stop. Pupil Ray goes through as a nodal ray, and no transverse Chrom aberration occurs

However, since the EYE LENS is NOT at the aperture stop, transverse aberration CAN occur from there

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