Lenticular lens

A lenticular lens is an array of magnifying lenses, designed so that when viewed from slightly different angles, different images are magnified.[1] The most common example is the lenses used in lenticular printing, where the technology is used to give an illusion of depth, or to make images that appear to change or move as the image is viewed from different angles.

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Lenticular printing

Lenticular printing is a multi-step process consisting of creating a lenticular image from at least two existing images, and combining it with a lenticular lens. This process can be used to create various frames of animation (for a motion effect), offsetting the various layers at different increments (for a 3d effect), or simply to show a set of alternate images which may appear to transform into each other.

Corrective lenses

Lenticular lenses are sometimes used as corrective lenses for improving vision. A bifocal lens could be considered a simple example.

Lenticular eyeglass lenses have been employed to correct extreme hypermetropia (farsightedness), a condition often created by cataract surgery when lens implants are not possible. To limit the great thickness and weight that such high-power lenses would otherwise require, all the power of the lens is concentrated in a small area in the center. In appearance, such a lens is often described as resembling a fried egg: a hemisphere atop a flat surface. The flat surface or "carrier lens" has little or no power and is there merely to fill up the rest of the eyeglass frame and to hold or "carry" the lenticular portion of the lens. This portion is typically 40 mm in diameter but may be smaller, as little as 20 mm, in sufficiently high powers. These lenses are generally used for plus (hyperopic) corrections at about 12 diopters or higher. A similar sort of eyeglass lens is the myodisc, sometimes termed a minus lenticular lens, used for very high negative (myopic) corrections. More aesthetic aspheric lens designs are sometimes fitted.[2]

Lenticular screens

Screens with a molded lenticular surface are frequently used with projection television systems. In this case, the purpose of the lenses is to focus more of the light into a horizontal beam and allow less of the light to escape above and below the plane of the viewer. In this way, the apparent brightness of the image is increased.

Ordinary front-projection screens can also be described as lenticular. In this case, rather than transparent lenses, the shapes formed are tiny curved reflectors.

3D television

A number of manufacturers are developing auto-stereoscopic high definition 3D televisions, using lenticular lens systems to avoid the need for special spectacles. One of these, Chinese manufacturer TCL is selling a 42" LCD model - the TD-42F - in China for around $20,000.[3]

Lenticular color motion picture processes

Lenticular lenses were used in early color motion picture processes of the 1920s such as the Keller-Dorian system and Kodacolor. This enabled color pictures with the use of merely monochrome film stock.

Angle of view of a lenticular print

The angle of view of a lenticular print is the range of angles within which the observer can see the entire image. This is determined by the maximum angle at which a ray can leave the image through the correct lenticule.

Angle within the lens

The diagram at right shows in green the most extreme ray within the lenticular lens that will be refracted correctly by the lens. This ray leaves one edge of an image strip (at the lower right) and exits through the opposite edge of the corresponding lenticule.

Definitions

Calculation

R=A-\arctan\left({p \over h}\right),

where

A=\arcsin \left({p \over 2r}\right),
h=e-f is the distance from the back of the grating to the edge of the lenticule, and
f=r-\sqrt{r^2-\left({p \over 2}\right)^2}.

Angle outside the lens

The angle outside the lens is given by refraction of the ray determined above. The full angle of observation O is given by

O=2(A-I),

where I is the angle between the extreme ray and the normal outside the lens. From Snell's Law,

I=\arcsin \left({n\sin(R) \over n_a}\right) ,

where n_a \approx 1.003 is the index of refraction of air.

Example

Consider a lenticular print that has lenses with 336.65 µm pitch, 190.5 µm radius of curvature, 457 µm thickness, and an index of refraction of 1.557. The full angle of observation O would be 64.6°.

Rear focal plane of a lenticular network

The focal length of the lens is calculated from the lensmaker's equation, which in this case simplifies to:

F={r \over n-1},

where F is the focal length of the lens.

The back focal plane is located at a distance BFD from the back of the lens:

BFD=F- {e \over n}.

A negative BFD indicates that the focal plane lies inside the lens.

In most cases, lenticular lenses are designed to have the rear focal plane coincide with the back plane of the lens. The condition for this coincidence is BFD=0, or

e={nr \over n-1}.

This equation imposes a relation between the lens thickness e and its radius of curvature r.

Example

The lenticular lens in the example above has focal length 342 µm and back focal distance 48 µm, indicating that the focal plane of the lens falls 48 micrometers behind the image printed on the back of the lens.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Lenticular, how it works". Lenstar.org. http://www.lenstar.org/how/hwmain.htm. Retrieved 2011-02-05. 
  2. ^ Jalie, Mo (2003). Ophthalmic Lenses and Dispensing. Elsevier Health Sciences. p. 178. ISBN 0750655267. http://books.google.com/?id=Zl45vQkISCwC&pg=PA173&dq=dispensing+for+aphakia#PPA178,M1. 
  3. ^ TV - Tom's Guide US "Give Me 3D TV, Without The Glasses". http://www.tomsguide.com/us/3DTV-autostereoscopic-CES,review-1490.html TV - Tom's Guide US. Retrieved 6 May 2010. 

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