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How control distortion at field angles above 90deg

  • December 20, 2021
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AsafP
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What would be the appropriate operands to use in the merit function in order to control the amount of distortion in fisheye lenses were field angles reaches 90 degrees or above?

Best answer by Mark.Nicholson

I’d use the SMIA TV distortion operand as it doesn’t require a paraxial reference, and it’s what is often quoted in lens specifications. Failing that, just REAY/X operands to target a specific field to a specific image location.

Distortion control in a Fisheye lens is hard, and it’s not because of a lack of operands. The fisheye takes an large angular range and outputs a smaller angular range for the prime imaging system to image. It’s inherently anamorphic, like the Mapmaker’s Problem. Most people don’t try to control distortion in a wide angle lens, and it’s often not even specified (it might be quoted on the spec sheet, but it wasn’t used as a design parameter). Remember that the entrance pupil of a wide angle lens is not constant, it moves and rotates as a function of field. That’s what makes the lens ‘wide angle’.

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Mark.Nicholson
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I’d use the SMIA TV distortion operand as it doesn’t require a paraxial reference, and it’s what is often quoted in lens specifications. Failing that, just REAY/X operands to target a specific field to a specific image location.

Distortion control in a Fisheye lens is hard, and it’s not because of a lack of operands. The fisheye takes an large angular range and outputs a smaller angular range for the prime imaging system to image. It’s inherently anamorphic, like the Mapmaker’s Problem. Most people don’t try to control distortion in a wide angle lens, and it’s often not even specified (it might be quoted on the spec sheet, but it wasn’t used as a design parameter). Remember that the entrance pupil of a wide angle lens is not constant, it moves and rotates as a function of field. That’s what makes the lens ‘wide angle’.

  • Mark  

AsafP
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  • December 21, 2021

Thank you Mark! I will try that...


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