Wavefront aberration function its aperture second derivatives evaluated using coddington’s equations

In this paper we obtain equations for the two aperture second derivatives of the wavefront aberration function in terms of the position of the local sagittal and tangential foci. The derivatives presented here are valid for meridional rays. The local foci positions for any tangential aperture zone a...

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Autores principales: Comastri, S.A., Simon, J.M.
Formato: JOUR
Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_09500340_v39_n7_p1543_Comastri
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spelling todo:paper_09500340_v39_n7_p1543_Comastri2023-10-03T15:49:43Z Wavefront aberration function its aperture second derivatives evaluated using coddington’s equations Comastri, S.A. Simon, J.M. In this paper we obtain equations for the two aperture second derivatives of the wavefront aberration function in terms of the position of the local sagittal and tangential foci. The derivatives presented here are valid for meridional rays. The local foci positions for any tangential aperture zone are calculated by tracing one ray that corresponds to that zone and using Coddington’s equations. The second derivative equations can be incorporated in the usual procedure of aberration computation, increasing from two to four the number of equations available for each tangential ray traced. © 1992 Taylor and Francis Ltd. JOUR info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_09500340_v39_n7_p1543_Comastri
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
description In this paper we obtain equations for the two aperture second derivatives of the wavefront aberration function in terms of the position of the local sagittal and tangential foci. The derivatives presented here are valid for meridional rays. The local foci positions for any tangential aperture zone are calculated by tracing one ray that corresponds to that zone and using Coddington’s equations. The second derivative equations can be incorporated in the usual procedure of aberration computation, increasing from two to four the number of equations available for each tangential ray traced. © 1992 Taylor and Francis Ltd.
format JOUR
author Comastri, S.A.
Simon, J.M.
spellingShingle Comastri, S.A.
Simon, J.M.
Wavefront aberration function its aperture second derivatives evaluated using coddington’s equations
author_facet Comastri, S.A.
Simon, J.M.
author_sort Comastri, S.A.
title Wavefront aberration function its aperture second derivatives evaluated using coddington’s equations
title_short Wavefront aberration function its aperture second derivatives evaluated using coddington’s equations
title_full Wavefront aberration function its aperture second derivatives evaluated using coddington’s equations
title_fullStr Wavefront aberration function its aperture second derivatives evaluated using coddington’s equations
title_full_unstemmed Wavefront aberration function its aperture second derivatives evaluated using coddington’s equations
title_sort wavefront aberration function its aperture second derivatives evaluated using coddington’s equations
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_09500340_v39_n7_p1543_Comastri
work_keys_str_mv AT comastrisa wavefrontaberrationfunctionitsaperturesecondderivativesevaluatedusingcoddingtonsequations
AT simonjm wavefrontaberrationfunctionitsaperturesecondderivativesevaluatedusingcoddingtonsequations
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