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Document1 Forensic Lenses

This document defines and describes 10 different types of lenses: 1. Convergent lenses focus incoming light rays to form an image. 2. Divergent lenses cause parallel rays to diverge and have a negative focal length. 3. Wide-angle lenses have a short focal length and wide field of view, allowing more of a scene to be captured. 4. Telephoto lenses allow shorter focal lengths to be used than the actual physical lens length.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
297 views3 pages

Document1 Forensic Lenses

This document defines and describes 10 different types of lenses: 1. Convergent lenses focus incoming light rays to form an image. 2. Divergent lenses cause parallel rays to diverge and have a negative focal length. 3. Wide-angle lenses have a short focal length and wide field of view, allowing more of a scene to be captured. 4. Telephoto lenses allow shorter focal lengths to be used than the actual physical lens length.

Uploaded by

diannedquizon
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

ASSIGNMENT- LENSES

1. Convergent Lens- A converging lens is an optical lens that converges all


rays of light passing through it. The primary purpose of a converging lens is to
focus the incoming rays from an object and converge them to form an image.

2. Divergent Lens- A lens that causes a


beam of parallel rays to diverge after
refraction, as from a virtual image; a lens
that has a negative focal length.

3. Wide- Angle Lens- A wide angle lens is any lens with a short focal length
and wide field of view. This lens allows the camera to capture much more of
the scene than a normal lens can, making it great for architectural and
landscape photography.
4. Telephoto Lens- Is a long- focus lens that allows photographers to utilize
a focal length that is in fact shorter than the lens physical length.

5. Slow and fast lenses- Within all Canon lenses, there is something called
the aperture. More specifically, the mechanism that makes up the aperture is
the diaphragm, a ring of overlapping, thin metal plates that either close down
or remain open during exposure. For the sake of clarity, we refer to this
mechanism as the aperture.

6. Single lens and twin lens- Dual-lens


cameras offer more advanced features than
single-lens cameras, including improved focus,
wider camera angles, and better zoom. Dual
lenses allow for different focal length coverage
using a telephoto lens and a wide-angle lens,
which is ideal for capturing both close-up and
wide-angle shots.
7. Achromatic Lens- An achromatic lens,
also referred to as an achromat, typically
consists of two optical components
cemented together, usually a positive low-
index (crown) element and a negative high-
index (flint) element.

[Link] lens- is a shorthand for


apochromatic lenses, which can more effectively
correct spherical and chromatic aberration than
standard achromat lenses when used for photography
or other purposes.

9. Rapid- rectilinear lens- A Rapid Rectilinear


lens, or RR lens, is a symmetrical pair of cemented
achromatic doublets.

10 . Anastigmat lens- An anastigmat or


anastigmatic lens is a photographic lens
completely corrected for the three main optical
aberrations: spherical aberration, coma,
and astigmatism.

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