Radius of curvature has specific meaning and sign convention in optical design. A spherical lens or mirror surface has a center of curvature located in (x, y, z) either along or decentered from the system local optical axis. The vertex of the lens surface is located on the local optical axis. The distance from the vertex to the center of curvature is the radius of curvature of the surface. The sign convention for the optical radius of curvature is as follows:
Thus when viewing a biconvex lens from the side, the left surface radius of curvature is positive, and the right surface has a negative radius of curvature.
Note however that in areas of optics other than design, other sign conventions are sometimes used. In particular, many undergraduate physics textbooks use an alternate sign convention in which convex surfaces of lenses are always positive. Care should be taken when using formulas taken from different sources.
Optical surfaces with non-spherical profiles, such as the surfaces of aspheric lenses, also have a radius of curvature. These surfaces are typically designed such that their profile is described by the equation
where the optic axis is presumed to lie in the z direction, and is the sag—the z-component of the displacement of the surface from the vertex, at distance from the axis. If and are zero, then is the radius of curvature and is the conic constant, as measured at the vertex (where ). The coefficients describe the deviation of the surface from the axially symmetric quadric surface specified by and .