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  2. Telecentric lens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telecentric_lens

    A telecentric lens is a special optical lens (often an objective lens or a camera lens) that has its entrance or exit pupil, or both, at infinity. The size of images produced by a telecentric lens is insensitive to either the distance between an object being imaged and the lens, or the distance between the image plane and the lens, or both, and ...

  3. Camera lens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camera_lens

    Different kinds of camera lenses, including wide angle, telephoto and speciality. A camera lens, photographic lens or photographic objective is an optical lens or assembly of lenses (compound lens) used in conjunction with a camera body and mechanism to make images of objects either on photographic film or on other media capable of storing an image chemically or electronically.

  4. File:Comparison of telecentric lenses.svg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Comparison_of...

    comparison of telecentric lenses Image title Comparison of a conventional lens (1), object-space telecentric lens (2), image-space telecentric lens (3) and bi-telecentric lens (4), assuming the images are in sufficient focus by CMG Lee.

  5. Cardinal point (optics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cardinal_point_(optics)

    Similarly, the allowed range of angles on the output side of the lens can be filtered by putting an aperture at the front focal plane of the lens (or a lens group within the overall lens), and a sufficiently small aperture will make the lens image-space telecentric. This is important for DSLR cameras having CCD sensors. The pixels in these ...

  6. Photographic lens design - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photographic_lens_design

    Other lenses for the Contax included the Biotar, Biogon, Orthometar, and various Tessars and Triotars. The last important Zeiss innovation before the Second World War was the technique of applying anti-reflective coating to lens surfaces invented by Olexander Smakula in 1935. [8] A lens so treated was marked with a red "T", short for "Transparent".

  7. Glossary of machine vision - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_machine_vision

    Telecentric lens. Compound lens with an unusual property concerning its geometry of image-forming rays. In machine vision systems telecentric lenses are usually employed in order to achieve dimensional and geometric invariance of images within a range of different distances from the lens and across the whole field of view. Telephoto lens. Lens ...

  8. Talk:Telecentric lens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Telecentric_lens

    Secondly, it only applies to an object-space telecentric lens. Third, it loses the point of how a telecentric lens actually works. What makes a lens telecentric is not that all the rays are "about parallel" to the optical axis. The properties of a telecentric lens come specifically from the fact that the chief ray is parallel to the axis.

  9. Angénieux retrofocus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angénieux_retrofocus

    Pierre Angénieux applied for a patent in 1950. In the original patent, he presented two lenses with an angle of view of 65°, approximately equal to the view of a f=35 mm lens on the 35mm format for still cameras; the first example had a maximum aperture of f / 2.5, while the second example had a maximum aperture of f / 2.2. [9]