Paper
15 October 2013 Design of systems involving easily measurable aspheres
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 8884, Optifab 2013; 88841D (2013) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2031897
Event: SPIE Optifab, 2013, Rochester, New York, United States
Abstract
Aspheric surfaces provide significant benefits to an optical design. Unfortunately, aspheres are usually more difficult to fabricate than spherical surfaces, making the choice of whether and when to use aspheres in a design less obvious. Much of the difficulty comes from obtaining aspheric measurements with comparable quality and simplicity to spherical measurements. Subaperture stitching can provide a flexible and effective test for many aspheric shapes, enabling more cost-effective manufacture of high-precision aspheres. To take full advantage of this flexible testing capability, however, the designer must know what the limitations of the measurement are, so that the asphere designs can be optimized for both performance and manufacturability. In practice, this can be quite difficult, as instrument capabilities are difficult to quantify absolutely, and standard asphere polynomial coefficients are difficult to interpret. The slope-orthogonal “Q” polynomial representation for an aspheric surface is ideal for constraining the slope departure of aspheres. We present a method of estimating whether an asphere described by Q polynomials is measurable by QED Technologies’ SSI-A system. This estimation function quickly computes the testability from the asphere’s prescription (Q polynomial coefficients, radius of curvature, and aperture size), and is thus suitable for employing in lens design merit functions. We compare the estimates against actual SSI-A lattices. Finally, we explore the speed and utility of the method in a lens design study.
© (2013) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Paul E. Murphy, Dave Stephenson, Andrew E. W. Jones, and Greg W. Forbes "Design of systems involving easily measurable aspheres", Proc. SPIE 8884, Optifab 2013, 88841D (15 October 2013); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2031897
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Cited by 3 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Aspheric lenses

Optical spheres

Interferometers

Lens design

Optical design

Manufacturing

Optics manufacturing

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