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  2. History of optics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_optics

    Often used by monks to assist in illuminating manuscripts, these were primitive plano-convex lenses, initially made by cutting a glass sphere in half. As the stones were experimented with, it was slowly understood that shallower lenses magnified more effectively. Around 1286, possibly in Pisa, Italy, the first pair of eyeglasses was made ...

  3. Lens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lens

    An extended hemispherical lens is a special type of plano-convex lens, in which the lens's curved surface is a full hemisphere and the lens is much thicker than the radius of curvature. Another extreme case of a thick convex lens is a ball lens, whose shape is completely round. When used in novelty photography it is often called a "lensball".

  4. Plano-convex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plano-convex

    Plano-convex may refer to: Plano-convex lens, in optics; Plano-convex, a type of mudbrick used by the ancient Sumerians This page was last edited on 20 ...

  5. Eyepiece - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eyepiece

    The 4-element orthoscopic eyepiece consists of a plano-convex singlet eye lens and a cemented convex-convex triplet field lens achromatic field lens. This gives the eyepiece a nearly perfect image quality and good eye relief, but a narrow apparent field of view — about 40°–45°. It was invented by Ernst Abbe in 1880. [3]

  6. Condenser (optics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Condenser_(optics)

    This condenser is composed of two lenses, a plano-convex lens somewhat larger than a hemisphere and a large bi-convex lens serving as a collecting lens to the first. The focus of the first lens is traditionally about 2mm away from the plane face coinciding with the sample plane.

  7. Collimator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collimator

    An example of an optical collimator with a bulb, an aperture (A), and a plano-convex lens (L) In optics, a collimator may consist of a curved mirror or lens with some type of light source and/or an image at its focus. This can be used to replicate a target focused at infinity with little or no parallax.

  8. Newton's reflector - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newton's_reflector

    The mirror was aperture reduced to an effective aperture of 1.3 inches by placing a disk with a hole in it between the observer's eye and the eyepiece. The telescope had a flat diagonal secondary mirror bouncing the light at a 90° angle to a Plano-convex eyepiece with a probable focal length of 4.5mm yielding his observed 35 times ...

  9. Field flattener lens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Field_Flattener_Lens

    The object in designing a field flattening lens is to create a lens that shifts the focal points of the Petzval surface to lie in the same plane. Consider inserting a pane of glass in a focusing beam. Due to refraction, the focal point of the beam is shifted by dependent on the thickness of the glass. Thus we have a thickness as a function of ...