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Interesting new lens technology (Link)
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Topic: Interesting new lens technology (Link) (Read 1739 times)
Tristin
NG Member
Posts: 1083
Nothing less, always more.
Interesting new lens technology (Link)
«
on:
June 08, 2016, 05:00:18 »
http://m.dpreview.com/news/1219259020/new-glassless-metalens-is-100-000x-thinner-than-conventional-optics
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-Tristin
richardHaw
Cute Panda from the East...
NG Member
Posts: 3182
Your lens loverboy
Re: Interesting new lens technology (Link)
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Reply #1 on:
June 08, 2016, 05:05:57 »
what sorcery is this!?
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http://richardhaw.com/
99 luftballons
Tristin
NG Member
Posts: 1083
Nothing less, always more.
Re: Interesting new lens technology (Link)
«
Reply #2 on:
June 08, 2016, 06:27:20 »
Currently a very specialized optical sorcery, but the possible applications for this as a base are numerous and powerful.
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-Tristin
richardHaw
Cute Panda from the East...
NG Member
Posts: 3182
Your lens loverboy
Re: Interesting new lens technology (Link)
«
Reply #3 on:
June 08, 2016, 07:46:14 »
i hope that it wont get fungus
i can see some uses in the medical field.
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http://richardhaw.com/
99 luftballons
Les Olson
NG Member
Posts: 502
You ARE NikonGear
Original paper and the fly in the ointment.
«
Reply #4 on:
June 08, 2016, 08:58:33 »
The original paper is at
http://science.sciencemag.org/content/352/6290/1190
- behind a pay wall, however. More technical details are free at
http://physicsworld.com/cws/article/news/2016/jun/02/high-efficiency-flat-lenses-shrink-down-to-the-nanoscale
It is the Rayleigh criterion and the Airy disc again: the diameter of two points just resolvable = 1.22 x numerical aperture x wavelength of light. They can achieve effective NA = 0.8: the diameter of the Airy disc can be below the wavelength, which is what they mean by "sub-wavelength resolution".
The catch is that the process only works with polarised light, and at present can only focus one visible wavelength at a time. Unless and until they solve that problem the approach will only work with single-wavelength imaging - which is OK for microscopy but not so good for photography. The other issue is that the best they could do was get 86% of light to be image-forming: ie, flare is a problem for imaging.
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