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Posts Tagged ‘Gaps’

Researchers propose ‘spaceplates’ to miniaturize lenses by reducing air gaps

17 Jun
The addition of the spaceplate reduces the distance needed between the lens element and the sensor, thus allowing smaller lenses

A lot of work has been done using high refractive index glasses, diffraction grating systems and lens element design to reduce the size of camera lenses, but a group of researchers are now targeting the air-space between those elements in a bid to create miniaturized optical systems. The team from the University of Ottawa proposes inserting what they call ‘spaceplates’ into a lens construction to alter the optical path in such a way that the gaps between elements in the lens can be reduced. They further propose that when combined with metalenses these spaceplates could, in theory, allow optical systems that are almost flat and extremely thin.

This shows how the research team propose the spaceplate idea could make regular lenses smaller, and replaced when the spaceplate is combined with a metalens

In any lens it is the area reserved for air – the gaps between the elements – that takes up the most space. These gaps of course are carefully calculated and are key to directing the path of light as it passes through from the front element to the camera’s sensor. The idea here is to compress those gaps using multiple layers of metasurfaces that provide negative refractive indexes to shorten the light path between one element and the next. In photographic and telescope optics mirror lenses aim to achieve a similar end, not so much by shortening the light path but by allowing the same distance to be traveled inside a shorter-than-usual lens barrel.

Metasurfaces are materials that alter the path of light not by using bulbous glass or plastic elements but by tiny structures within their make up. As light passes through grids, nets and grates within the material redirect the light, altering its path. The grating system in Canon’s DO lenses works in a broadly similar way bit on a different scale.

Trails using oil between the lens element and the spaceplate showed that the same area of the subject, a painting in this case, could be rendered in-focus with less distance between the lens and the sensor when a spaceplate was used.

The spaceplate idea is still very much at the concept stage, and trails conducted have used liquids and vacuums instead of air. They have also produced relatively small improvements, but at the same time the construction of the metasurface layers of the spaceplates has been kept relatively simple. So far the team has achieved a compression factor of R=5, and say that if they can achieve a factor of R=40 by combining multiple layers of metasurface materials to a thickness of 100µm they could reduce the air space in a typical smartphone camera lens from 1mm to 0.1mm.

Although the technology is most likely to be employed in industrial processes before consumer products, the idea does offer potential for interchangeable lens system cameras too. The team has demonstrated that the spaceplate does not affect focal length, works with all visible wavelengths and offers high transmission efficiency. Scaling up to spaceplates with more metasurfaces should be relatively easy as manufacturing processes are already in use.

Don’t expect to see spaceplates in camera lenses anytime soon, but it certainly could be something we see in the future in other products, such as projection lenses in AR/VR and holographic headsets. For more information you can read the full paper on the Nature website. Warning: it’s 6700 words long, isn’t easy reading and contains no jokes.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Ecosystems 101: Mind the Gaps

13 May

The large rock in the photo above is a very special rock. It is known as the Rosetta Stone, and it is the showcase exhibit in the British Museum in London. It's technically just a rock with some scratching on it, but it was responsible for our learning how to decode Ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs.

How? Because it was a decree issued in Egypt in 196 BC. Specifically, it was issued in three different languages (Ancient Greek, Demotic script and Egyptian hieroglyphs) and thus was the key to our being able to figure out the previously indecipherable language of Ancient Egypt. It was like capturing the other side's code book in WWII.

Which means this rock was literally a key to unlocking a heretofore opaque ancient language.

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Live Between Buildings: Narrow Micro-Homes Fill City Gaps

05 Sep

[ By WebUrbanist in Architecture & Houses & Residential. ]

narrow home competition entry

Playful yet thought-provoking, this project asks: what do we do with small leftover spaces in cities … particularly in urban areas where even a few square feet of real estate can cost a fortune?

narrow house competition winners

Live between Buildings by Ole Robin Storjohann and Mateusz Mastalski won first place in a Loft 2 competition held by FAKRO, which challenged contestants to rethink loft living and material efficiency without sacrificing light and space.

narrow interstitial house concept

Their various prototype proposals have nearly no ground footprint, being instead suspended in part or entirely between existing structures. In testing the idea, they took actual buildings and voids, abstracted and simplified their forms, all to show how such interventions would work in major cities from New York and London to Amsterdam and Tokyo.

narrow home architectural entries

A wide selection of shapes suggests many possibilities using modular pieces, including half-serious and semi-practical suggestions, such as egg and X shapes, as well as outright silly ones, like a Christmas-tree home or cloud-bubble house, more intended just to illustrate the potential flexibility.

narrow home case studies

Out of a variety of compelling entries, just why did this pair win the award? “The Jury appreciated the way the basic idea – creating small infill-dwellings in-between existing buildings – has been worked out in extended research, thus providing models for various housing types in different cities. The plan can be realized entirely out of roof windows (with some technical adjustments) and offers an innovative idea for using empty spaces in urban fabric. The possibility of shapes is endless. The project was very beautifully drawn and communicated on a single sheet, the section describing both the architectural idea and the exciting occupation of the proposed building.””

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[ By WebUrbanist in Architecture & Houses & Residential. ]

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