ECOPTIK (CHANGCHUN) LTD Datasheets for Spherical Lenses
Spherical lenses, also known as singlets, are transparent optical components consisting of one or more pieces of optical glass with surfaces so curved that they serve to converge or diverge the transmitted rays from an object, thus forming a real or virtual image of that object. This area includes micro spherical lenses as well.
Spherical Lenses: Learn more
| Product Name | Notes |
|---|---|
| A cemented cylindrical lens can minimize chromatic aberration, so it can be used to focus a single direction of a multi-color light beam. Unlike a spherical lens that produces a... | |
| A double concave lens has negative focal length, thereby causing collimated incident light to diverge. Double concave lens has equal radius of curvature on both side of lens. They are... | |
| Achromatic Lenses are used to minimize or eliminate chromatic aberration. The achromatic design also helps minimize spherical aberrations. Achromatic Lenses are ideal for a range of applications, including fluorescence microscopy,... | |
| BRD Optical provide meniscus lens in both positive and negative focal lengths. These lenses are useful when used with another lenses to increase or decrease the focal length. This lens... | |
| Plano concave lens bend parallel input rays so they diverge from one another on the output side of the lens and hence have a negative focal length. The spherical aberration... | |
| Plano-convex lenses are positive focal length elements that have one spherical surface and one flat surface. These lenses are designed for infinite conjugate (parallel light) use or simple imaging in... | |
| The double convex lens is symmetrical across both its horizontal and vertical axis. Each of the lens' two faces can be thought of as originally being part of a sphere. |