Senior Fitness - Exercise and Nutrition for Aging Men and Women
FREE Article Feed for your website.
Home Ownership Magazine
Party Planning Information
Article Marketing Resources
Bio-Medical Research Article Database
Informative Articles on Life, Love and Happiness
Tutorials on Business to Writing
Famous Quotes from Famous People
Song Lyric Information
New US Patent Information
Comprehensive List of Content by Category
Online Auctions and Shopping Related Articles
Article Search
Most Recent Articles
Title: Method for processing information in an electronic device, a system, an electronic device and a processing block
Patent Number: 7,437,574 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Ronkka,   et al.

Title: Secure unsent message storage pending server connection
Patent Number: 7,437,573 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Counts,   et al.

Title: Key management device and method for the encrypted storage of digital data words
Patent Number: 7,437,572 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Gammel,   et al.

Title: Dedicated nonvolatile memory
Patent Number: 7,437,571 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Cocchi,   et al.

Title: Method, system, and program for distributing software between computer systems
Patent Number: 7,437,570 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Shackelford

Title: Module for secure management of digital date by encryption/decryption and/or signature/verification of signature which can be used for dedicated servers
Patent Number: 7,437,569 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Le Quere

Title: Apparatus and method for establishing trust
Patent Number: 7,437,568 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Das-Purkayastha,   et al.

Title: Portable device and method for accessing data key actuated devices
Patent Number: 7,437,567 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Hollingshead

Title: System and method for identity confirmation of a contact published on a network
Patent Number: 7,437,566 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Moore,   et al.

Title: Digital watermark detection method and apparatus
Patent Number: 7,437,565 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Asano,   et al.

Title: Digital watermark detection method and apparatus
Patent Number: 7,437,564 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Asano,   et al.

Title: Software integrity test
Patent Number: 7,437,563 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Vaha-Sipila

Title: Method and apparatus for digitally signing electronic mail that originates from a browser
Patent Number: 7,437,562 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Philips,   et al.

Title: Authentication of data transmitted in a digital transmission system
Patent Number: 7,437,561 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Beuque,   et al.

Title: Method and apparatus for establishing a secure smart card communication link through a communication network
Patent Number: 7,437,560 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Page,   et al.

Title: Electronic message authentication
Patent Number: 7,437,559 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Ji,   et al.

Title: Method and system for verifying identification of an electronic mail message
Patent Number: 7,437,558 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Fenton,   et al.

Title: Garbage collection system and method for a mobile communication terminal
Patent Number: 7,437,557 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Lee,   et al.

Title: Global visibility controls for operating system partitions
Patent Number: 7,437,556 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Tucker,   et al.

Title: Encryption systems and methods for identifying and coalescing identical objects encrypted with different keys
Patent Number: 7,437,555 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Douceur,   et al.

Title: Method and apparatus for generating queries for secure authentication and authorization of transactions
Patent Number: 7,437,554 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Arnold,   et al.

Title: Systems and methods for providing autonomous security
Patent Number: 7,437,553 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Alten

Title: User authentication system and user authentication method
Patent Number: 7,437,552 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Shin

Title: Public key infrastructure scalability certificate revocation status validation
Patent Number: 7,437,551 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Chan,   et al.

Title: System for providing session-based network privacy, private, persistent storage, and discretionary access control for sharing private data
Patent Number: 7,437,550 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Savage,   et al.

Title: Datacast distribution system
Patent Number: 7,437,549 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Lindqvist,   et al.

Title: Network level protocol negotiation and operation
Patent Number: 7,437,548 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Alfieri

Title: Method and computer program product for offloading processing tasks from software to hardware
Patent Number: 7,437,547 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Hyder,   et al.

Title: Multiple, cooperating operating systems (OS) platform system and method
Patent Number: 7,437,546 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Shamia,   et al.

Title: Apparatus and system for the autonomic configuration of a storage device
Patent Number: 7,437,545 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Haustein,   et al.

Title: Data processing apparatus and method for executing a sequence of instructions including a multiple iteration instruction
Patent Number: 7,437,544 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Chin,   et al.

Title: Reducing the fetch time of target instructions of a predicted taken branch instruction
Patent Number: 7,437,543 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Doing,   et al.

Title: Identifying and processing essential and non-essential code separately
Patent Number: 7,437,542 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Wang,   et al.

Title: Atomically updating 64 bit fields in the 32 bit AIX kernel
Patent Number: 7,437,541 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Brenner

Title: Complex domain floating point VLIW DSP with data/program bus multiplexer and microprocessor interface
Patent Number: 7,437,540 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Paolucci,   et al.

Title: Issue unit for placing a processor into a gradual slow mode of operation in response to a detected livelock condition within a processor pipeline
Patent Number: 7,437,539 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Abernathy,   et al.

Title: Apparatus and method for reducing execution latency of floating point operations having special case operands
Patent Number: 7,437,538 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Brooks,   et al.

Title: Methods and apparatus for predicting unaligned memory access
Patent Number: 7,437,537 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Bridges,   et al.

Title: Systems and methods for task migration
Patent Number: 7,437,536 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Iwamoto

Title: Method and apparatus for issuing a command to store an instruction and load resultant data in a microcontroller
Patent Number: 7,437,535 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Joffe,   et al.

Title: Local and global register partitioning technique
Patent Number: 7,437,534 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Tremblay,   et al.

Title: Quantum information processing device and method
Patent Number: 7,437,533 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Ichimura,   et al.

Title: Memory mapped register file
Patent Number: 7,437,532 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Chen,   et al.

Title: Testing memories
Patent Number: 7,437,531 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Spica,   et al.

Title: System and method for mapping file block numbers to logical block addresses
Patent Number: 7,437,530 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Rajan

Title: Method and mechanism for efficiently creating large virtual memory pages in a multiple page size environment
Patent Number: 7,437,529 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Burugula,   et al.

Title: Gang blocks
Patent Number: 7,437,528 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Moore,   et al.

Title: Memory device with delayed issuance of internal write command
Patent Number: 7,437,527 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Davis,   et al.

Title: Information processing method and apparatus having data locations accessible by different devices in accordance with different permissions
Patent Number: 7,437,526 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Kusakabe,   et al.

Title: Guaranteed undo retention
Patent Number: 7,437,525 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Yang,   et al.

Title: Method and apparatus for dumping memory
Patent Number: 7,437,524 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Narayan,   et al.

Title: System and method for on-the-fly file folding in a replicated storage system
Patent Number: 7,437,523 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Ting,   et al.

Title: Memory module indicator device
Patent Number: 7,437,522 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Bungo

Title: Multistream processing memory-and barrier-synchronization method and apparatus
Patent Number: 7,437,521 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Scott,   et al.

Title: Adaptive snoop-and-forward mechanisms for multiprocessor systems
Patent Number: 7,437,520 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Shen,   et al.

Title: Multithread controller and control method
Patent Number: 7,437,519 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Kiyota,   et al.

Title: Hiding conflict, coherence completion and transaction ID elements of a coherence protocol
Patent Number: 7,437,518 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Tsien

Title: Methods and arrangements to manage on-chip memory to reduce memory latency
Patent Number: 7,437,517 Issued on 10/14/2008 to da Silva,   et al.

Title: Programming models for eviction policies
Patent Number: 7,437,516 Issued on 10/14/2008 to Wintergerst,   et al.

Title: Power consumption management method
Patent Number: 7,123,994 Issued on 10/17/2006 to Weik,   et al.

Title: Method and structure for repairing or modifying surface connections on circuit boards
Patent Number: 6,784,377 Issued on 08/31/2004 to Chamberlin,   et al.

Title: Microelectronic device assemblies having a shielded input and methods for manufacturing and operating such microelectronic device assemblies
Patent Number: 6,784,367 Issued on 08/31/2004 to Russell,   et al.

Title: Full-length infectious cDNA clones of tick borne flavivirus
Patent Number: 6,794,174 Issued on 09/21/2004 to Pletnev,   et al.

Title: Strap tie holder
Patent Number: 6,796,099 Issued on 09/28/2004 to Georges,   et al.

Title: Radiotherapy treatment and imaging patient support table
Patent Number: 6,941,599 Issued on 09/13/2005 to Zacharopoulos,   et al.

Title: Glycopeptide carboxy-saccharide derivatives
Patent Number: 6,903,070 Issued on 06/07/2005 to Linsell,   et al.

Title: Power supply apparatus and power supply control device
Patent Number: 7,141,958 Issued on 11/28/2006 to Saitoh

Title: Inverter circuit for surface light source system
Patent Number: 7,141,935 Issued on 11/28/2006 to Ushijima,   et al.

Title: Collar to be used with a deck mop to retain yarn and connect to the handle
Patent Number: 6,941,608 Issued on 09/13/2005 to Morad,   et al.

Title: Methods of operating vacuum processing equipment and methods of processing wafers
Patent Number: 6,795,745 Issued on 09/21/2004 to Ueno,   et al.

Title: Consequential location derived information
Patent Number: 7,120,450 Issued on 10/10/2006 to Hines,   et al.

Title: Method of isolating the current sense on power devices while maintaining a continuous stripe cell
Patent Number: 7,118,951 Issued on 10/10/2006 to Yedinak,   et al.

Title: Rotating surface of revolution reactor with feed and collection mechanisms
Patent Number: 6,858,189 Issued on 02/22/2005 to Ramshaw,   et al.

Title: Portable protective air gap tool and method
Patent Number: 6,957,117 Issued on 10/18/2005 to Verdecchio,   et al.

Title: Wireless network with a cipher key change procedure
Patent Number: 7,120,421 Issued on 10/10/2006 to Hermann,   et al.

Five-element optical device Number:7,154,683 from the United States Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) owispatent

Home    Author Login    Submit Article    Article Search    Add Your Link    Edit Your Link    Contact Us    Advertising    Disclaimer

   

 
Web LinkGrinder.com

Top Breaking News
     Greek, Cypriot Leaders Resume Unification Talks in Nicosia by Nathan Morley
     Indonesia Tobacco Sales Grow, Raising Health Fears
     South Korea Allows Top Defector to Travel Overseas by VOA News

Title: Five-element optical device

Abstract: An optical device with five air-spaced optical elements. An optical device in the form of an eyepiece is disclosed with a center negative lens and two outer positive lenses on each side of the intermediate negative lens. The eyepiece transmits light from an object to an exit pupil along angles corresponding to the position of a focus point on an object. In a preferred embodiment the positive lenses are identical.

Patent Number: 7,154,683 Issued on 12/26/2006 to Volk


Inventors: Volk; Brian E (Jefferson, MA)
Appl. No.: 11/160,721
Filed: July 6, 2005


Current U.S. Class: 359/769 ; 359/643
Current International Class: G02B 9/60 (20060101); G02B 25/00 (20060101)
Field of Search: 359/643-645,769


References Cited [Referenced By]

U.S. Patent Documents
716035 December 1902 Harting
1421156 June 1922 Booth
2346061 April 1944 Altman
2348667 May 1944 Warmisham
2586866 February 1952 Schade
2645156 July 1953 Tronnier
2645157 July 1953 Lowenthal
2831397 April 1958 Berger et al.
2885928 May 1959 Baker
2900871 August 1959 Baker
2959102 November 1960 Cook
3586418 June 1971 Abe
3612662 October 1971 Sissel
3658412 April 1972 Seaman
3922072 November 1975 Rogers
3958866 May 1976 Matsubara
RE29856 December 1978 Kano
4929066 May 1990 Wakimoto et al.
6181479 January 2001 Koizumi
6367954 April 2002 Futami
6414798 July 2002 Koizumi
Primary Examiner: Schwartz; Jordan
Attorney, Agent or Firm: Herbster; George A.

Claims



What is claimed is:

1. An optical system including a housing extending along an axis with opposite open ends and comprising, in said housing five air-spaced lens elements including: A) a first lens element on the axis intermediate said ends of said housing, B) second and third lens elements positioned seriatim on the axis between the first lens element and one end of the housing, C) fourth and fifth lens elements positioned seriatim on the axis between said first lens element and said other end of the housing, said first lens element having the characteristics of one of positive and negative lenses and said second through fifth lens elements having the characteristics of the other of the positive and negative lenses and each of said positive lens elements having a piano-convex shape.

2. An optical system as recited in claim 1 wherein said first lens element has the characteristics of a negative lens and said second through fifth lens elements have the characteristics of a positive lens.

3. An optical system as recited in claim 2 wherein each of said second through fifth lens elements are constituted by identical lens elements.

4. An optical system as recited in claim 2 wherein each of said first through fifth lens elements comprises a singlet lens.

5. An optical system as recited in claim 4 wherein said second through fifth lens elements are constituted by identical singlet lenses.

6. An eyepiece for producing an image of an object in the front of said eyepiece wherein said eyepiece includes a housing extending along an axis with opposite open front and rear ends and comprises, in said housing, a negative lens intermediate the ends of said housing and four identical positive lenses wherein first and second ones of said positive lenses are positioned seriatim between said negative lens and said front end of said housing and third and fourth ones of said positive lenses are positioned seriatim between said negative lens and said rear end of said housing.

7. An eyepiece as recited in claim 6 wherein each of said negative and first through fourth positive lenses is a singlet lens.

8. An eyepiece as recited in claim 7 wherein each of said first through fourth positive lenses is oriented in the same manner along the axis.

9. An eyepiece as recited in claim 6 wherein said negative lens is a bi-concave singlet lens and each of said positive lenses is a piano-convex singlet lens.

10. An eyepiece as recited in claim 9 wherein said positive lenses are oriented with their planar lens surfaces facing the same direction.

11. An eyepiece as recited in claim 9 wherein said positive lenses are oriented with their planar lens surfaces facing the front of said eyepiece.

12. An eyepiece as recited in claim 6 wherein: i) said negative lens comprises a material having an index of refraction of 1.923, an Abbe number of 18.9, a front concave surface with a radius of 41.7068 mm, a rear concave surface with a radius of 78.466 mm and an axial thickness of 1.785 mm, ii) each positive lens comprises a material having an index of refraction of 1.788, an Abbe number of 47.4, a front planar surface, a rear convex surface with a radius of 38.835 mm and an axial thickness of 4.050 mm, and iii) the distance from the object to said front surface of said first positive lens is 12.88 mm, the axial spacing between said lenses from front to rear are 0.524, 7.175, 1.351 and 3.434 mm respectively whereby said eyepiece has an eye relief of 29 mm.

13. An eyepiece as recited in claim 6 wherein: i) said negative lens comprises a material having an index of refraction of 1.923, an Abbe number of 18.9 and has a front concave surface with a radius of 41.7068 mm, a rear concave surface with a radius of 78.466 mm and an axial thickness of 1.785 mm, ii) each positive lens comprises a material having an index of refraction of 1.788, an Abbe number of 47.4 and has a front planar surface, a rear convex surface with a radius of 38.835 mm and an axial thickness of 4.050 mm, and iii) the distance from the object to said front surface of said first positive lens is 10.58 mm, the axial spacing between said lenses from front to rear are 3.511, 4.54, 2.151 and 2.856 mm, respectively whereby said eyepiece has an eye relief of 29 mm.

14. An eyepiece adapted for use with a night vision device including an output screen, said eyepiece comprising: A) a housing including means for adjusting the position of said eyepiece relative to the screen and having front and rear ends, and, B) five air spaced antireflective coated lenses in said housing including: i) a negative lens intermediate said front and rear ends of said housing comprising a material having an index of refraction of 1.923, an Abbe number of 18.9 and having a front concave surface with a radius of 41.7068 mm, a rear concave surface with a radius of 78.466 mm and an axial thickness of 1.785 mm, and ii) first through fourth identical positive lens, each said positive lens comprising a material having an index of refraction of 1.788, an Abbe number of 47.4 and having a front planar surface, a rear convex surface with a radius of 38.835 mm and an axial thickness of 4.050 mm, each lens being mounted to said housing such that the distance from the screen to a front surface of said first positive lens is 12.88 mm and such that the axial spacing between said lenses from front to rear are 0.524, 7.175, 1.351 and 3.434 mm, respectively.

15. An eyepiece adapted for use with a night vision device including an output screen, said eyepiece comprising: A) a housing including means for adjusting the position of said eyepiece relative to the screen and having front and rear ends, and, B) five air spaced antireflective coated lenses in said housing including: i) a negative lens intermediate said front and rear ends of said housing comprising a material having an index of refraction of 1.923, an Abbe number of 18.9 and having a front concave surface with a radius of 41.7068 mm, a rear concave surface with a radius of 78.466 mm and an axial thickness of 1.785 mm, and ii) first through fourth identical positive lens, each said positive lens comprising a material having an index of refraction of 1.788, an Abbe number of 47.4 and having a front planar surface, a rear convex surface with a radius of 38.835 mm and an axial thickness of 4.050 mm, each lens being mounted to said housing such that the distance from the screen to a front surface of said first positive lens is 10.58 mm and such that the axial spacing between said lenses from front to rear are 3.511, 4.54, 2.151 and 2.856 mm respectively.
Description



FIELD OF THE INVENTION

This invention generally relates to optical systems comprising one or more optical devices and more particularly to a lens form adapted for use in a variety of optical devices.

DESCRIPTION OF RELATED ART

Optical systems include one or more of a variety of optical devices. A particular application will determine the selection of specific optical devices to be included in the optical system. As an example, in the medical field optical systems serve as endoscopes. A rigid endoscope includes multiple optical devices, namely: an objective, a relay and an eyepiece. In the photographic field a camera as an optical system includes an objective as an optical device. Monoculars and telescopes incorporate eyepieces to present an image for viewing. Night vision systems include an optical device in the form of an eyepiece for allowing a user to view an image projected from the phosphor output screen of an image intensifier tube.

Significant efforts have been made to develop lens forms for each of the foregoing and other optical devices. Some of these efforts have led to highly specialized lens forms that are adapted for a single use, such as an objective for a camera, but not for use with another type of optical device, such as a relay. In these applications the number and attendant costs of optical elements, such as lenses or mirrors, are secondary to requisite image quality. For other applications, a lens designer seeks to produce a lens based upon a lens form that essentially satisfies optical requirements for the application with the fewest possible optical elements. In such applications the lens designer may also address issues such as physical size, weight and manufacturing costs.

For example, U.S. Pat. No. 716,035 (1902) to Harting, U.S. Pat. No. 1,421,156 (1922) to Booth, U.S. Pat. No. 2,645,156 (1953) to Tronnier and U.S. Pat. No. 2,645,157 (1953) to Lowenthal disclose photographic objectives having as a lens form three air-spaced lens elements. Each has an intermediate optical element comprising a "negative" singlet lens; the outer two optical elements comprise doublet lenses that have the characteristics of a "positive" lens.

As used herein, the terms "positive" and "negative" follow industry practices for optical devices using lenses with centered, flat or spherical surfaces. A "positive" lens has a positive effective focal length and typically has a thicker central thickness along a central axis than edge thickness. A "negative" lens has a negative effective focal length and typically has a thinner central thickness along a central axis than an edge thickness.

In each of the foregoing photographic objectives the lens form uses lenses to control the Petzval Sum for the optical device. The Petzval Sum is a measure of the curvature of an image from any lens element or group of lens elements in an optical device. This value is obtained by summing, for each lens element in the optical device, the product of the lens element power and refractive index of the glass for that lens element. As the Petzval Sum decreases, the curvature of the image also decreases. However, the lenses in the foregoing references are characterized by other aberrations to blur fine lines thereby to provide a "soft" image.

U.S. Pat. No. 2,586,866 (1952) to Schade discloses a high aperture five-component objective including a central bi-convex negative lens and four positive lenses. The positive lenses are concave-convex or bi-convex lenses, and the second interlens space from the front of the objective has the largest dimension. This configuration has the object of projecting a focused image onto a curved surface that is concave toward the objective.

U.S. Pat. No. 2,900,871 (1959) to Baker disclose a magnifier with three air-spaced optical elements including an intermediate negative lens two outer doublet lenses that have the characteristics of positive lenses. The magnifiers are designed to enable the stereoscopic viewing of a map.

U.S. Pat. No. 3,586,418 (1971) to Abe discloses an eyepiece with four air-spaced optical devices between an object and pupil. The optical element closest to the object is a negative singlet lens. The remaining three optical elements include a singlet lens and two doublet lenses. Each of these three optical elements has the characteristics of positive lenses.

The foregoing references disclose lens forms with a minimal number of lens elements in an objective. However, the purpose of providing an image with these lens forms runs counter to a purpose, in many applications, of lens forms in eyepieces and other optical devices for providing a clear image.

For some eyepieces, it is important to consider eye relief in developing a lens form. As known, eye relief is the distance of the eye from the eye lens of an optical device that is best suited to the use of the optical system incorporating the eyepiece. U.S. Pat. No. 3,612,662 (1970) to Sissel discloses an eyepiece having a wide field of view and a predetermined eye relief of about 28 mm with an effective focal length of about 27.4 mm, a field of view of 48.98 degrees, a back focal length of 10.6 mm and an exit pupil of 10 mm. The eyepiece comprises, rearward from its front end facing the object, a double convex singlet, a negative meniscus-shaped double concave to the front, a positive meniscus-shaped doublet concave to the front, a double concave singlet, two double convex singlets and a positive meniscus-shaped doublet convex to the front.

U.S. Pat. No. 3,658,412 (1972) to Seaman discloses a wide angle binocular eyepiece with four air-spaced optical devices to provide a 75 80 mm eye relief, a field of view of 50.degree. and an exit pupil of 80 mm. These devices include a positive meniscus lens convex to the observer, a concave-convex doublet consisting of a positive lens and a negative, a positive meniscus lens convex to the observer, and a positive concave-convex lens convex to the observer. When compared to the disclosure in U.S. Pat. No. 3,612,662, it can be seen that U.S. Pat. No. 3,658,412 reduces the number of optical elements from ten to four thereby tending to reduce the costs and weight of the resulting eyepiece.

Thus for each particular eyepiece application a lens designer must select from a variety of lens forms that satisfy requirements for eye relief, focal distances, field of view, image curvature, magnifications, aberrations and other factors. If a lens form is selected and then a parameter, such as eye relief, changes, that change, at a minimum, will require recalculation for some of the different optical element in the eyepiece. At the worst, such a change will require a complete lens redesign.

What is needed is a single lens form that can be used for designing a variety of optical devices, such as objectives, relays and eyepieces. Further, such a lens form should minimize the total number of optical elements and reduce the costs of manufacturing different optical elements. Preferably, the lens form should reduce the number of different types of optical elements in the optical device. What is also needed is a lens form that can be readily adapted for different applications and that can accommodate changes in parameters such as eye relief for eyepieces.

SUMMARY

Therefore it is an object of this invention to provide lens form that can be adapted for different optical device applications.

Another object of this invention is to provide a lens form that is adapted for different optical device applications and that limits the number of optical elements.

Yet another object of this invention is to provide a lens form that is adapted for different optical device applications and that limits the types of optical elements in the optical device.

Still another object of this invention is to provide a lens form that enables certain parameters of an optical device to be varied without a need to change the design of any optical element.

Still yet another object of this invention is to provide an eyepiece in which both the number of lenses and the number of lenses with different parameters are limited.

Yet still another object of this invention is to provide an eyepiece according to a lens form that is readily adapted to accommodate different values of eye relief.

In accordance with one aspect of this invention an optical system includes a housing extending along an axis with opposite open ends. The housing carries five air-spaced lens elements. A first lens element is intermediate the ends of the housing. Second and third lens elements are positioned seriatim on the axis between the first lens element and one end of the housing. Fourth and fifth lens elements are positioned seriatim on the axis between the first lens element and the other end of the housing. The first lens element has the characteristic of one of positive and negative lenses, and the second through fifth lens elements have the characteristics of the other of the positive and negative lenses and each of said second through fourth lens elements has a piano-convex shape.

In accordance with another aspect of this invention, an eyepiece for producing an image of an object in front of the eyepiece includes a housing extending along an axis with opposite open front and rear ends. The housing carries a negative lens and four identical positive lenses. The negative lens is intermediate the ends of the housing. First and second positive lenses are positioned seriatim between the negative lens and the front end of the housing. Third and fourth positive lenses are positioned seriatim between the negative lens and the rear end of the housing.

In accordance with another aspect of this invention an eyepiece is adapted for use with a night vision device with a phosphor output screen. The eyepiece can be focused relative to the output screen and comprises a housing, a negative lens and four identical positive lenses. The negative lens has an index of refraction of 1.923 and an Abbe number of 18.9 and is in the housing intermediate the front and rear ends. This negative lens has a front concave surface with a radius of 41.7068 mm, a rear concave surface with a radius of 78.466 mm and an axial thickness of 1.785 mm. Each positive lens has an index of refraction of 1.788, an Abbe number of 47.4, a front planar surface, a rear convex surface with a radius of 38.835 mm and an axial thickness of 4.050 mm. Each lens is mounted to the housing such that the distance between the first and second positive lenses is 0.524 mm, between the second positive and negative lenses is 7.175 mm, between the negative and third positive lenses is 1.351 mm and between the third and fourth positive lenses is 3.434 mm whereby the eyepiece has a distance from the front positive lens to the screen of 12.88 mm and an eye relief of 29 mm.

In accordance with yet another aspect of this invention, an eyepiece is adapted for use with a night vision device with a phosphor output screen. The eyepiece can be focused relative to the output screen and comprises a housing, a negative lens and four identical positive lenses. The negative lens has an index of refraction of 1.923 and an Abbe number of 18.9 and is in the housing intermediate the front and rear ends. This negative lens has a front concave surface with a radius of 41.7068 mm, a rear concave surface with a radius of 78.466 mm and an axial thickness of 1.785 mm. Each positive lens has an index of refraction of refraction of 1.788 and an Abbe number of 47.4, a front planar surface, a rear convex surface with a radius of 38.835 mm and an axial thickness of 4.050 mm. Each lens is mounted to the housing such that the distance between the first and second positive lenses is 3.511 mm, between the second positive and negative lenses is 4.54 mm, between the negative and third positive lenses is 2.151 mm and between the third and fourth positive lenses is 2.856 mm whereby the eyepiece has a distance from the front positive lens to the screen of 10.58 mm and an eye relief of 29 mm.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The appended claims particularly point out and distinctly claim the subject matter of this invention. The various objects, advantages and novel features of this invention will be more fully apparent from a reading of the following detailed description in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which like reference numerals refer to like parts, and in which:

FIG. 1 is a perspective view of an application for this invention;

FIG. 2 is a cross section of an eyepiece as one embodiment of a lens form of this invention; and

FIG. 3 is a ray trace for the eyepiece shown in FIG. 2.

DESCRIPTION OF ILLUSTRATIVE EMBODIMENTS

FIG. 1 depicts an optical device with a lens form in the form of an eyepiece 10 associated with an optical system in the form of a night vision system 11 all being mounted in or on a base, not shown. The night vision system 11 includes an image intensifier tube 13 with a phosphor output screen 14 for producing an object. FIG. 1 also depicts an optional filter 15 for the image on the output screen 14.

The eyepiece 10 includes a housing 16 with front and rear openings 17 and 18, respectively. In this disclosure the "front end" is the end of the eyepiece 10 that faces the object.

In this particular embodiment the eyepiece 10 includes a focus mechanism 20 including externally threaded segments 21 angularly spaced about the periphery of the housing 16 that engage an internal continuous thread 23 thereby to enable a user to advance or retract the housing 16 along an optical axis 24 for focus adjustment in a manner well known in the art.

The distance between an exit pupil 25 and the rear surface of an eye lens 26, which is one of several positive lenses in the eyepiece 10, defines the eye relief. Thus an individual using the apparatus shown in FIG. 1 positions her or her eye at an approximate distance from the eye lens 26 corresponding to the eye relief. The viewed image can then be focused to accommodate the user's eye.

FIG. 2 depicts the lens form of this invention as an eyepiece 10 with five air-spaced optical elements in the form of lenses positioned in the housing 16. FIG. 2 also depicts the position of the eyepiece 10 relative to an object, such as the image intensifier tube screen 14 and the exit pupil 25. In this implementation of the lens form, the five air-spaced optical elements are constituted by five air-spaced singlet lenses including the positive eye lens 26 and, from the front to rear, positive lenses 30 and 31, a negative lens 32 and a positive lens 33. This implementation of the five-element lens form can provide a light-weight, compact eyepiece 10.

As shown in FIG. 2 the lenses 30, 31, 32 and 26 are piano-convex singlet lenses that have the characteristics of a positive lens while the singlet lens 32 is a bi-convex lens having the characteristics of a negative lens. This combination of positive and negative lenses provides a lens designer a degree of control over the Petzval Sum for the eyepiece 10. That is, the positive values of the lenses in the Petzval Sum contributed by the four positive lenses 26, 30, 31 and 33 and the negative value for the negative lens 32 provide an offset to each other to minimize the Petzval Sum. Such control is useful in matching the curvature of the screen 14 thereby to minimize the field curvature of the image produced by the eyepiece 10 or any other optical device incorporating this lens form.

An optical device incorporating this lens form may also provide another advantage. The eyepiece 10 includes four positive lenses 26, 30, 31 and 33 with identical design characteristics. Consequently, the lens form enables an optical device to be constructed with five optical elements taken from two different lens types. That is, the eyepiece only requires the design of one negative lens and one positive lens. This feature can improve manufacturing efficiency over those associated optical devices having five lenses or five different designs. The costs for acquiring four identical positive lenses can be less than for four different positive lenses. Moreover, during assembly it is only necessary to discriminate between a positive lens and a negative lens; there is no need to distinguish among a plurality of different positive lenses that differ only by dimensions.

The foregoing and other advantages can be more fully understood by considering the construction of two eyepieces, such as the eyepiece 10, for two applications in which object distance between the screen 14 in FIG. 2 and the lens 30 changes. Each example has common design criteria, namely:

TABLE-US-00001 Object size: 18 mm Eye relief: 29 mm Exit pupil: 14 mm Apparent HFOV: .apprxeq.20.degree.

With these inputs and other input characteristics for spherical and chromatic aberrations, coma and astigmatism, an eyepiece 10 has been constructed with the lens parameters shown in Table I:

TABLE-US-00002 TABLE I Lens Parameter Positive Lens Negative Lens Front Radius .infin. -78.466 mm Rear Radius 38.835 mm 41.7068 mm Center Thickness 4.050 mm 1.785 mm Glass SLAH 64 SNPH 2 Index of Refraction 1.788 1.923 Abbe Number 47.4 18.9

Table II demonstrates how the lens form accommodates different distances from the object to the front lens without modifying the characteristics of the lenses in the eyepiece. Example 1 sets forth the lens spacing for a distance from the front lens to the object of 10.58 mm; Example 2, a distance of 12.88 mm.

TABLE-US-00003 TABLE II Spacing Example 1 Example 2 Lens 30 Lens 31 3.511 mm 0.524 mm Lens 31 Lens 32 4.54 mm 7.175 mm Lens 32 Lens 33 2.151 mm 1.351 mm Lens 33 Lens 36 2.856 mm 3.434 mm Eye Relief 29.00 mm 29.00 mm EFL 27.05 mm 26.80 mm BFL 10.58 mm 12.88 mm HFOV 19.85.degree. 19.99.degree. Pupil 14.00 mm 14.00 mm

More specifically, assume Example 1 is based on an original design requiring 10.58 mm space between the object and the front positive lens 30. Further assume that the design process later requires a greater distance. Example 2 shows that distance being increased to 12.88 mm. Both examples use the same lenses. The accommodation of this change is achieved merely by altering the spacing between adjacent lenses. Moreover other optical parameters of the eyepiece 10 do not change to any significant extent.

FIG. 3 depicts a group of ray traces for an on-axis focus point 34 and an off-axis, or full-field, focus point 35. A chief ray trace 34A from the on-axis focus point 34 passes through the eyepiece 10 along the axis 24. An upper ray 34B and a lower ray 34C extend from the on-axis focus point 35 at an angle that represents the cone of light from the output screen 14 at the on-axis focus point 34 that would pass through a 14 mm diameter exit pupil at location 25.

Still referring to FIG. 3, the full-field focus point 35 is positioned at the periphery of the aperture for the output screen 14 and is shown with a chief ray 35A, upper ray 35B and lower ray 35C. The angle between the upper and lower rays 35B and 35C represents the cone of light from the output screen 14 at the full-axis focus point that would fill a 14 mm diameter exit pupil at location 25. Each of the rays 35A, 35B and 35C are parallel and pass through the exit pupil 25 at an angle. As known, the angle of the rays 35A, 35B and 35C to the axis 24 at the exit pupil 25 translates into the position of the full-field focus point 35 relative to the axis 24.

As also shown in FIG. 3, the upper ray 35B passes through the exit at a point offset from the optical axis 24. The transverse distance at the exit pupil 25 from the center axis 24 and the intersection of the ray 35B corresponds to the user's pupil. As the user rotates his or her eye, the eye receives rays of different angles that correspond to different positions on the screen 14. Consequently the user can scan the image over the entire field of view while maintaining the image intensifier tube in a constant position.

In low-light environments, including those that require the use of night vision equipment, transmission through the eyepiece 10 or other similar optical device may be enhanced by applying an anti-reflective coating. As such coatings are known in the art and very thin, they are not disclosed in the figures.

Thus the lens form shown in FIG. 2 provides a unique and powerful lens form for a range of optical devices. In addition to the specifically disclosed eyepiece 10, the five air-spaced element lens form has been used to design objective and relay optical devices. An optical device can be simply and easily constructed by limiting the five optical elements to singlet lenses. Manufacturing efficiencies can be realized by using four identical positive lenses. Certain design variations can be accommodated with this lens from merely by varying the spacing parameters. Thus, it is possible to accommodate changes in different user imposed requirements such as distances from the object to the eyepiece without having to redesign the entire eyepiece.

This invention has been disclosed with respect to an eyepiece that produces an image from the output of a curved surface object constituted by a curved image intensifier phosphor screen. It will be apparent that the design may be further altered to accommodate a flat planar object. An object may be an illuminated object or an illuminating object such as a lamp source. The disclosure describes a particular lens glass. Other glasses can be used. Any of the five singlet lenses that constitute the five air-spaced elements in this lens form can be replaced by a compound lens that has the appropriate positive or negative lens characteristics. Other variations will also be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art. Therefore, it is the intent of the appended claims to cover all such variations and modifications as come within the true spirit and scope of this invention.

*


Free Web Sudoku Puzzles.
Solve with your browser.
1   6     9 8    
  9   3 4       6
    2           5
  6   9     5    
        7        
    8     1   9  
5           3    
2       3 7   6  
    3 8     1   7
What is it?



Add Your Site · Terms Of Service · Privacy Policy


DISCLAIMER
Linkgrinder is a free service that searches the Internet and indexes all files found so that you may search quickly and easily for shared files. These files are created and made available individually by users whose identity we are not aware of and who we have no control over. In essence we function like a search engine tool; these files ARE NOT STORED OR SERVED BY OUR NETWORK. We are not responsible for any materials obtained by using our service. We do not monitor any of the contents of these files. These files may contain viruses, illegal materials, materials inappropriate for minors, offensive files and the like. BY USING OUR SERVICE, YOU ASSUME FULL RESPONSIBILITY FOR DOWNLOADING THESE MATERIALS AND WILL INDEMNIFY US FOR ANY DAMAGES THAT MAY BE INCURRED.

For More Specific Information VIEW OUR TERMS OF SERVICE.

Thank you and Enjoy!