[闲聊] Bigma终于要变回Sigma了吗? 球面像差

楼主: ReDmango (爱战暱称的哪个白痴)   2019-07-12 22:45:54
https://tinyurl.com/y4j644mu
When you look through your viewfinder and things seem a little bit blurry or
lacking definition, it’s probably because you are using an “el cheapo”
lens. So you read reviews and buy a much more expensive lens, and what do
you do next?
You don’t go out to learn about composition and lighting to make better
pictures. No. If you are a conscious and professional photographer, you start
pixel-peeping to rationalize your expensive purchase.
And what do you find then?
The problem is still there. Right there, in the corners. They’re soft. The
center is OK, but the corners are still soft. So you read more reviews and
buy a better lens.
Lather, rinse, repeat.
But it’s not the manufacturer’s fault, nor yours for not having enough
money to buy a perfect lens. Blame Greek mathematician Diocles, who
formulated the problem over two thousand years ago in his book Burning
Mirrors.
The Problem
You see, lenses are made from spherical surfaces. The problem arises when
light rays outside the center of the lens or hitting at an angle can’t be
focused at the desired distance in a point because of differences in
refraction.
Which makes the center of the image sharper than the corners. Which leads to
countless YouTube reviews on lenses. And countless hours of watch time. And
makes advertisers and YouTubers happy.
In his 1690 book, Treatise on Light, astronomer Christiaan Huygens points out
that both Isaac Newton (the greatest scientist of all time) and Gottfried
Leibniz (the last universal genius) tried to solve the problem, but couldn’t:
As has in fact occurred to two prominent Geometricians, Messieurs Newton and
Leibnitz, with respect to the problem of the figure of glasses for collecting
rays when one of the surfaces is given.
It is appropriate to mention that Newton invented a telescope that solved the
chromatic aberration, but not the spherical aberration.
In a 1949 article published in the Royal Society Proceedings, Wasserman and
Wolf formulated the problem—how to design a lens without spherical aberration
—in an analytical way, and it has since been known as the Wasserman-Wolf
problem.
They “proposed to use two aspheric adjacent surfaces to correct spherical
and coma aberrations, with a solution consisting of two first-order
simultaneous differential equations, which are solved numerically according
to Malacara-Hernández et al.”
In other words, the solution was an approximation solved with numerical
analysis (brute-force with computers), not a definitive one. Moreover, the
solution involved aspherical elements, which are harder to manufacture in a
precise way and are thus more costly.
To this day, when you see that your lens has aspherical elements to correct
for optical aberrations and give you sharper images wide open, you can thank
Wasserman-Wolf.
However, the importance of solving this problem goes well beyond giving you a
sharper picture of your feet for your nine Instagram followers. It would help
make better and cheaper to manufacture optical systems in all areas, be it
telescopes, microscopes, and everything in between.
As you can imagine, everyone had been trying.
The Solution
Fast forward to 2018 when Héctor A. Chaparro-Romo, a doctoral student at the
National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), who had been trying to solve
this problem for 3 years, invited Rafael G. González-Acuña, a doctoral
student from Tec de Monterrey, to help him solve the problem.
At first, González-Acuña did not want to devote resources to what he knew
to be a millenary, impossible to solve problem. But upon the insistence of Hé
ctor Chaparro-Romo, he decided to accept the challenge.
After months of working on solving the problem, Rafael González-Acuña
recalls, “I remember one morning I was making myself a slice of bread with
Nutella, when suddenly, I said out loud: Mothers! It is there!”
(Note: Mothers, from the Spanish word “Madres,” means, of course, many
moms. But in this context it is equivalent to the expression “Holy sh*t!”
in English, or, to a lesser extent, “Eureka!” in Greek.)
He then ran to his computer and started programming the idea. When he
executed the solution and saw that it worked, he says he jumped all over the
place. It is unclear whether he finished eating the bread with Nutella.
Afterwards, the duo ran a simulation and calculated the efficacy with 500
rays, and the resulting average satisfaction for all examples was
99.9999999999%. Which, of course, is great news for gear reviewers on
YouTube, as they will still be able to argue about the 0.0000000001% of
sharpness difference among lens brands.
Their findings were published in the article General Formula for Bi-Aspheric
Singlet Lens Design Free of Spherical Aberration, in the journal Applied
Optics.
The image below shows the algebraic formula. “In this equation we describe
how the shape of the second aspherical surface of the given lens should be
given a first surface, which is provided by the user, as well as the
object-image distance,” explains González-Acuña. “The second surface is
such that it corrects all the aberration generated by the first surface, and
the spherical aberration is eliminated.”
The formula solves the Wasserman-Wolf problem, formulated analytically in
1949, but known to scientists for about two thousand years.
The Levi-Civita Problem
As part of this research, Rafael G. González-Acuña, Alejandro Chaparro-Romo
and Julio Gutiérrez-Vega also published the article “General Formula to
Design Freeform Singlet Free of Spherical Aberration and Astigmatism“ in
Applied Optics, where they give an analytical solution to the Levi-Civita
problem formulated in 1900.
The Levi-Civita problem, which has existed without a solution for over a
century, was also considered a mythical problem by the specialized community.
It is important to note that both solutions—the Wasserman-Wolf problem and
the Levi-Cita problem—are analytical, with symbolic math. This means that
the solution to a problem, no matter how you change the input variables, is
unique and not an approximation.
So… can we expect cheaper and better lenses?
Better? Yes. Truly sharper from corner to corner.
Cheaper? probably not. Even though lenses will be cheaper to manufacture,
remember that once somebody stamps the “made for photographers” sticker on
a product, it is priced many times higher because of the “added value” to
your artistry.
Regardless, I can only wish Rafael González-Acuña, Alejandro Chaparro-Romo
and Julio Gutiérrez-Vega a long and healthy life. Given enough time, maybe
they can also solve the “One Memory Card Slot Problem” of the Nikon Z7. To
be fair, that one’s been around for less than a year.
(via Tec de Monterrey)
About the author: Eduardo Machuca is Yet-Another-Photographer that taught for
eight years at both the bachelor’s and master’s degree level in advertising
photography. He lives, and has always lived, in Mexico, and loves traveling
around the hood and taking care of his alebrijes, with the help of an alux.
希望Bigma赶快跟这位大神联系 解决球面像差问题
赶快变成S(mall)igma 赞赞赞
作者: ferrinatice (Fervent Apprentice)   2019-07-12 22:59:00
这镜片好像品客洋芋片的胡须...
作者: h311013   2019-07-12 23:10:00
大! 还要更大!
作者: jhangyu (jhangyu)   2019-07-13 00:40:00
红芒果大大,可是这种曲面的镜片感觉更难制造
作者: PF30   2019-07-13 01:43:00
最近似乎有一篇新闻再说困扰很久的球面像差被解决了(就这篇)
作者: diablohinet   2019-07-13 02:02:00
真的厉害! 不知道距离实际制造出到消费市场还要多久
作者: PF30   2019-07-13 02:52:00
除了做出那个镜片,不知道能不能把这个公式应用在数位修正上
作者: snapdragon (弹指龙)   2019-07-13 04:00:00
墨西哥终于贡献burrito跟taco以外的东西惹
作者: Jcat (大猫)   2019-07-13 08:53:00
先找到厂商肯用抛物面镜再来谈这鬼东西
作者: j9131993 (Jerry)   2019-07-13 16:51:00
成本有比较低吗
作者: victoryuy (Victor)   2019-07-14 19:13:00
这个纯学术性而已 没应用价值
作者: lwei781 (nap til morning?)   2019-07-15 08:40:00
磨镜片成本井喷
作者: kmlvli84 (daan_snake)   2019-07-16 15:21:00
业界:我觉得一点点像差是可以接受的啦
作者: alwaysxd (JC)   2019-07-26 17:41:00
材料工艺都进步的今天,那一点点像差才有利可图XD

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