Optical Engineering Science. Stephen RoltЧитать онлайн книгу.
href="#ulink_31d72832-c7d0-5036-9761-f0fea2b22da2">Figure 2.5.
Vignetting tends to darken the image for objects further away from the optical axis. As such, it is an undesirable effect. At the same time, it can be used to control optical imperfections or aberrations by deliberately removing more marginal rays.
Figure 2.5 Vignetting.
2.6 Field Stops and Other Stops
In addition to the aperture stop, an optical system might also contain a field stop. This is an aperture located in a plane that is conjugate with the image plane. Its first purpose is to provide a crisp (often circular) boundary to the viewable image. Secondly, it excludes light from object locations lying outside the area of interest. In so doing, the field stop reduces the level of unwanted light that might otherwise be scattered into the image plane and so reduce image contrast. For the same reason, other, intermediate stops may be introduced into an optical design in order to further reduce the level of scattered light.
2.7 Tangential and Sagittal Ray Fans
The analysis pursued hitherto has considered the propagation of rays in a single plane. From an analytical perspective, for ray tracing in an ideal system and determining the cardinal points of that system, this is a perfectly acceptable approach. However, in reality, rays are not necessarily confined to the plane containing the object and the optical axis. With the selection of rays delineated by a two-dimensional, circular aperture, we must expect some rays to be out of this plane. A group of co-planar rays, emanating from a single object point and bounded by the entrance pupil is referred to as a ray fan. A ray fan that lies in the plane defined by the object and optical axis is known as the tangential ray fan. The sagittal ray fan emanates from the same object point and lies in a plane that is perpendicular to that of the tangential ray fan. This is illustrated in Figure 2.6.
The tangential ray fan is also referred to as the meridional ray fan; the two terms are equivalent. In general any ray that is not in the tangential plane, i.e. not a tangential ray, is referred to as a skew ray. A skew ray will never cross the optic axis.
2.8 Two Dimensional Ray Fans and Anamorphic Optics
The introduction of two distinct sets of ray fans, tangential and sagittal, together with the inclusion of skew rays confirms that sequential ray propagation in an axial geometry is essentially a two-dimensional problem. Hitherto, all discussion and, in particular, the matrix analysis, has been presented in a strictly one-dimensional form. However, the strict description of a ray in two dimensions requires the definition of four parameters, two spatial and two angular. In this more complete description, a ray vector would be written as:
Figure 2.6 (a) Tangential ray fan; (b) Sagittal ray fan.
hx is the x component of the distance of the ray from the optical axis
θx is the x component of the angle of the ray to the optical axis
hy is the y component of the distance of the ray from the optical axis
θy is the y component of the angle of the ray to the optical axis
In this two dimensional representation, the matrix element representing each optical element would be a 4 × 4 matrix instead of a 2 × 2 matrix. However, the matrix is not fully populated in any realistic scenario. For a rotationally symmetric optical system, as we have been considering thus far, there can only be four elements:
That is to say, the impact of each optical surface is identical in both the x and y directions in this instance. However, there are optical components where the behaviour is different in the x and y directions. An example of this might be a cylindrical lens, whose curvature in just one dimension produces focusing only in one direction. The two dimensional matrix for a cylindrical lens would look as follows:
A component that possesses different paraxial properties in the two dimensions is said to be anamorphic. A more general description of an anamorphic element is illustrated next:
Note there are no non-zero elements connecting ray properties in different dimensions, x and y. This would require the surfaces produce some form of skew behaviour and this is not consistent with ideal paraxial behaviour. Since this is the case, the two orthogonal components, x and y, can be separated out and presented as two sets of 2 × 2 matrices and analysed as previously set out. All relevant optical properties, cardinal points are then calculated separately for x and y components. Even if focal points are identical for the two dimensions, the principal planes may not be co-located. This gives rise to different focal lengths for the x and y dimension and potentially differential image magnification. This differential magnification is referred to as anamorphic magnification. Significantly, in a system possessing anamorphic optical properties, the exit pupil may not be co-located in the two dimensions.
2.9 Optical Invariant and Lagrange Invariant
The field angle, i.e. the angle of the chief ray and the marginal ray angles, will change as the rays propagate through an optical system. The relationship between these angles is inherently constrained by the magnification properties of the optical system in the paraxial approximation. The optical invariant is a parameter that, in the paraxial approximation, constrains the relationship between any two rays that propagate through an optical system. We now have two general rays as described by their ray vectors:
The optical invariant, O, is given by:
(2.4)
The optical invariant is, in the paraxial approximation, preserved on passage through an optical system. That is to say:
n′, h′, θ′, etc. are ray parameters following propagation.
Derivation of the above invariant is straightforward using matrix analysis.
Hence:
From (1.23) we know that the determinant of the matrix is given by the ratio of the refractive indices in the relevant media, so: