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▪ CONTENTS
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3.3.2. Aberrations of the conic
surface
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3.5. Aberration function
►
3.4.
Terms and conventions
For understanding text related to optical aberrations, it is necessary
to know the meaning of terms used in their description and calculation.
Part of the latter is sign convention, the purpose of which is to assign
to every parameter related to a final determination of the optical
path length for any point in the pupil its appropriate numerical value. This
ensures that all the contributions to the path length will be properly
combined, to result in an accurate description of the wavefront form and
directly related to it orientation of individual rays.
Basic terms and parameters used in
calculation and description of primary aberrations, including sign
convention, are given in FIG. 25-26.
A quick summary of the sign convention is as follows:
▪ optical axis of a centered system
coincides with the horizontal (z) axis of the coordinate system, with
zero coinciding with the center of the aperture stop;
▪ the object is to the left of
the optical system so that the incident light travels from left to
right; object distance is measured from the center of the aperture
stop, thus numerically negative;
▪ distance from surface to a displaced aperture
stop is numerically negative for the stop to the
left, positive
for the stop to the right of the surface (for instance, it is negative for
mirror-to-stop separation in the Schmidt camera, with the stop at the
corrector, and positive for stop-to-secondary separation in a two-mirror
telescope, the primary being the aperture stop for the secondary);
▪ surface radius of curvature is
positive if its center lies to the right from a surface, negative if the
center is to the left
▪ distance to the image formed by
the optical system is positive if it is to the right of the image forming
element, and negative if it is to the left from it
▪ distance from the image to the exit pupil
is negative for exit pupil to the right, postive for exit pupil to the
left of the image
▪ point height is positive if above
the optical axis, negative if below
▪ angle is positive if opening
upwards from the optical axis, negative if opening down;
In short, the sign convention is consistent with the coordinate frame.
More complex, or specialized texts often find it convenient to deviate
from the sign convention consistency for one or another reason, readjusting
affected parameters accordingly with respect to the sign applied. On the
other hand, not a few readers find sign inconsistency to be the greatest
convenience.
With the general parameters numerically
determined, primary aberrations of an optical surface can be described
either in their wavefront or ray form. The former are determined by
aberration coefficients which, when
multiplied with surface diameter and angle of incidence (for abaxial
aberrations), specify the size of wavefront deviation. The latter are
determined by their geometric size in the image plane, or
transverse aberration. Just as the
wavefront and the rays themselves, the two are directly related, and are
expressed with similar groups of parameters. These parameters are based
on object properties (distance, height), surface properties (diameter,
radius of curvature, conic) and image properties, as determined by the
Gaussian approximation.
Follows more detailed overview of the usual forms of presentation of
wavefront aberrations - so called aberration function. It will first
present the general form of aberration coefficients for three
point-image quality, their relation to wavefront and transverse
aberration, and then continue to the
aggregate wavefront aberration in its general form, its relation to
Seidel aberration expressions and lower-order Zernike aberration form.
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3.3.2. Aberrations of the conic
surface
▐
3.5. Aberration function
► |