image planes (original) (raw)

Author: the photonics expert

Definition: planes which are conjugate to an object plane, so that objects are imaged there

Categories: article belongs to category general optics general optics, article belongs to category vision, displays and imaging vision, displays and imaging

DOI: 10.61835/cm6 [Cite the article](encyclopedia%5Fcite.html?article=image planes&doi=10.61835/cm6): BibTex plain textHTML Link to this page LinkedIn

When analyzing the imaging properties of an optical instrument such as a telescope, photo camera or a microscope, one often considers the imaging of object points lying in a plane perpendicular to the optical axis, called the object plane. An image plane is then a plane in which a sharp image of those object points appears, at least within Gaussian optics. In reality, one will not obtain sharp image points due to diffraction and optical aberrations, which are not considered in the context of Gaussian optics. For example, the actual points with best sharpness generally lie on a surface with some curvature (field curvature), not in a plane. So the concept of an image plane is only an approximation.

The object and image plane are conjugate planes. When the position of the object plane is modified (e.g. by longitudinal movements of objects), the location of the image plane changes as well; the amount of that change can be calculated using the longitudinal magnification.

In some situations, there is not only an object and a single image plane, but multiple image planes because the imaging occurs in more than one step. There is then a final image plane, where one may place an image sensor, for example, and in addition some intermediate image planes. In a microscope, for example, there is often such an intermediate image plane just before the ocular lens; the ocular can be considered to image that plane to infinity, and the lens of the observer's eye can image that to the retina.

In some instruments, and additional elements such as a reticle is placed in an intermediate image plane. This is then also sharply imaged into the final image plane. This is useful for measurement microscopes and telescopes, for example. However, one often avoids placing elements in intermediate image claims which should not be imaged. For example, it could be detrimental to have the optical surface of a prism or a lens in an intermediate image plane because otherwise any scratches or dust particles would also appear in the final image. However, one sometimes places a field lens there; this should then have a particularly clean surface.

Image planes should not be confused with focal planes. They coincide with those only for objects at infinite distance.

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