Astigmatism. image. object

Similar documents
Distribution of Refractive Error. 20 year old males. Distribution of Aberrations

PART 3: LENS FORM AND ANALYSIS PRACTICE TEST

PART 3: LENS FORM AND ANALYSIS PRACTICE TEST - KEY

SPHERE, CYLINDER, AXIS, and ADD Power: Why these four variables? Example Prescriptions: UNDERSTANDING A PRESCRIPTION SPHERICAL LENSES 8/31/2018

Physics Chapter Review Chapter 25- The Eye and Optical Instruments Ethan Blitstein

EYE-REFRACTIVE ERRORS

AO TECHNICAL REPORT A STUDY OF LENS CONSTRUCTION AND USE AMERICAN OPTICAL CORPORATION SOUTHBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS 01550

3/6/2014. Because: Answer: Early studies comparing acuity with spectacles vs. scl or rigid cl s

Introduction. Geometrical Optics. Milton Katz State University of New York. VfeWorld Scientific New Jersey London Sine Singapore Hong Kong

Chapter 36. Image Formation

Learn Connect Succeed. JCAHPO Regional Meetings 2017

OPTICAL SYSTEMS OBJECTIVES

Fundamental Paraxial Equation for Thin Lenses

HARD TORIC CONTACT LENSES ASTIGMATISM DEFINITION AND OPTIC BASIS

Chapter 3: LENS FORM Sphere

OPTICS REVIEW. Mark E. Wilkinson, OD Khadija S. Shahid, OD, MPH

UNITY VIA PROGRESSIVE LENSES TECHNICAL WHITE PAPER

Chapter 36. Image Formation

RETINOSCOPY LABORATORY MICHAEL DAVIDSON RON OFRI

Chapter 9 - Ray Optics and Optical Instruments. The image distance can be obtained using the mirror formula:

Multiple-Choice Questions

Chapter 18 Optical Elements

INTRODUCTION TO LENSOMETRY

Laboratory 7: Properties of Lenses and Mirrors

Explanation of Aberration and Wavefront

Chapter 34: Geometric Optics

Optics Supplement. Christopher S. Wolfe, OD, FAAO

Laboratory experiment aberrations

Lenses- Worksheet. (Use a ray box to answer questions 3 to 7)

A Checklist for Managing Spectacle Lens Complaints. Presented By: Raymond P. Dennis, M.A. (Ed.) Middlesex Community. Patient Complaints

LENSES. a. To study the nature of image formed by spherical lenses. b. To study the defects of spherical lenses.

Dispensing 1. Prepared by Hatem S.H. Barhoom MHSC (clinical optometry) UKM Malaysia

VCT1101 Ophthalmic Materials I (2 hrs. per week) Course Outline and Reading Assignment

The eye & corrective lenses

Introduction. The Human Eye. Physics 1CL OPTICAL INSTRUMENTS AND THE EYE SPRING 2010

Physics 6C. Cameras and the Human Eye. Prepared by Vince Zaccone For Campus Learning Assistance Services at UCSB

Chapter 34 Geometric Optics (also known as Ray Optics) by C.-R. Hu

continuing education course Approved by the American Board of Opticianry

Reading: Lenses and Mirrors; Applications Key concepts: Focal points and lengths; real images; virtual images; magnification; angular magnification.

Waves & Oscillations

Physics 11. Unit 8 Geometric Optics Part 2

Eschenbach Low Vision Training Program

VARILUX FITTING GUIDE GUIDELINES FOR SUCCESSFULLY FITTING VARILUX LENSES

Why Understand Lens Technology? Everything Evolves. Refined Mediocrity Is Still Mediocrity. Copyright: Phernell C. Walker, II, AS, NCLC, ABOM

OpenStax-CNX module: m Vision Correction * OpenStax

Lab 11: Lenses and Ray Tracing

7 = <» _1_. The Language of Physics. Summary of Important Equations. J_ Pi. \j?i rj

Converging Lenses. Parallel rays are brought to a focus by a converging lens (one that is thicker in the center than it is at the edge).

Applied Optics. , Physics Department (Room #36-401) , ,

Chapter 36. Image Formation

DEFECTS OF VISION THROUGH APHAKIC SPECTACLE LENSES*t

28 Thin Lenses: Ray Tracing

Chapters 1 & 2. Definitions and applications Conceptual basis of photogrammetric processing

More problems for Chapter 12 of Introduction to Wave Phenomena (Hirose- Lonngren) θ =.

General Physics II. Optical Instruments

Copyright 2016, Phernell Walker, BSB, ABOM

EyeQue Personal Vision Tracker: How It Works

Refraction Training Manual

Lens Design I. Lecture 3: Properties of optical systems II Herbert Gross. Summer term

Geometrical Optics. Have you ever entered an unfamiliar room in which one wall was covered with a

PHYSICS 289 Experiment 8 Fall Geometric Optics II Thin Lenses

PHYSICS FOR THE IB DIPLOMA CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS

Chapter 23. Light Geometric Optics

Concepts of Optics Quiz. 8. Spherical lenses focus along a single point; cylindrical lenses focus along a.

Physics II. Chapter 23. Spring 2018

Notation for Mirrors and Lenses. Chapter 23. Types of Images for Mirrors and Lenses. More About Images

Spherical Mirrors. Concave Mirror, Notation. Spherical Aberration. Image Formed by a Concave Mirror. Image Formed by a Concave Mirror 4/11/2014

Optics: Lenses & Mirrors

Downloaded from

Optics of the Human Eye

Lens Design I. Lecture 3: Properties of optical systems II Herbert Gross. Summer term

Wave Front Topography. ReSeeVit Evolution Topography Module for Modi Topographer

ABO Certification Training. Part II: Basic Optical Principles

Physics 142 Lenses and Mirrors Page 1. Lenses and Mirrors. Now for the sequence of events, in no particular order. Dan Rather

Lenses. A lens is any glass, plastic or transparent refractive medium with two opposite faces, and at least one of the faces must be curved.

Chapter 25. Optical Instruments

GEOMETRICAL OPTICS Practical 1. Part I. BASIC ELEMENTS AND METHODS FOR CHARACTERIZATION OF OPTICAL SYSTEMS

LO - Lab #06 - The Amazing Human Eye

Dr. Todd Satogata (ODU/Jefferson Lab) Monday, April

PHYSICS. Chapter 35 Lecture FOR SCIENTISTS AND ENGINEERS A STRATEGIC APPROACH 4/E RANDALL D. KNIGHT

OPH 260 BASIC CONTACT LENS CONCEPTS

Optics. The Eyes Have It. Chapter Nine. by Tim Root. pneumatic retinopexy, scleral buckles, and three corneal transplants

Tangents. The f-stops here. Shedding some light on the f-number. by Marcus R. Hatch and David E. Stoltzmann

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

REFLECTION THROUGH LENS

University of Rochester Department of Physics and Astronomy Physics123, Spring Homework 5 - Solutions

Retinoscopy: Research Applications

Basic Optics System OS-8515C

Create a number line. Determining cylinder power

IMAGE SENSOR SOLUTIONS. KAC-96-1/5" Lens Kit. KODAK KAC-96-1/5" Lens Kit. for use with the KODAK CMOS Image Sensors. November 2004 Revision 2

Lecture 8. Lecture 8. r 1

10/25/2017. Financial Disclosures. Do your patients complain of? Are you frustrated by remake after remake? What is wavefront error (WFE)?

Chapter 29/30. Wave Fronts and Rays. Refraction of Sound. Dispersion in a Prism. Index of Refraction. Refraction and Lenses

Chapter 23. Mirrors and Lenses

Astronomy 80 B: Light. Lecture 9: curved mirrors, lenses, aberrations 29 April 2003 Jerry Nelson

Image Formation by Lenses

Study on Imaging Quality of Water Ball Lens

Tips for selecting a useful stand magnifier

Phys 531 Lecture 9 30 September 2004 Ray Optics II. + 1 s i. = 1 f

Tips for selecting a useful stand magnifier

Transcription:

TORIC LENSES Astigmatism In astigmatism, different meridians of the eye have different refractive errors. This results in horizontal and vertical lines being focused different distances from the retina. Here, for example, is the image of a fan dial chart formed by an astigmatic eye. object image The amount of astigmatism is characterized by the dioptric difference of the two meridians that differ the most. These meridians are invariably at right angles to one another. Usually they are roughly horizontal and vertical, but sometimes they may be oblique. While the myope can at least see near objects clearly and the hyperope may, through the exercise of accommodation, see distant objects clearly, the astigmat sees objects at all distances as being blurred. The most common cause of astigmatism is a cornea with a surface shaped more like that of a football than a basketball. High astigmatism is almost toric lenses, page 1 W. F. Long, 1992

always corneal. Smaller contributions come from internal astigmatism thought to be due mainly to the crystalline lens. Astigmatism can be and usually is combined with myopia or hyperopia. Astigmatism can be corrected with cylinder lenses. In practice it is corrected with lenses which have toric surfaces. barrel form tire form A toric surface is generated mathematically by rotating a circular arc around an axis that does not go through the center of the circle. (If we rotated it around the center of the circle we'd just get a sphere.) This generates surfaces in barrel form or tire form (donut form) as shown above. The prescription for a toric lens is written as if it were a superposition of a spherical lens (which has the same prescription in all meridians) and a cylinder lens (which has power in only one meridian). For example -5.00/-2.00x175 corresponds to five diopters of myopia on top of two diopters of astigmatism with the correcting cylinder lens oriented at 175. toric lenses, page 2 W. F. Long, 1992

Power Cross Spectacle lenses consist of one spherical surface and one toric surface. Prescriptions for spectacle lenses are, however, written as a superposition of spherical and cylindrical lenses. There are three ways to write a spectacle prescription; plus cylinder form (favored by M.D.'s), minus cylinder form (favored by optometrists), and cross cylinder form (used, sometimes, in fabrication labs). It's easiest to understand these forms and their relationship by reference to a power cross like the one below. F 2 α+90 F α This cross represents a lens surface as viewed from the doctor's point of view, i.e. looking straight at the patient. The lens has two principal meridians (meridians of circular cross-section), with powers F 1 and F 2. Their orientations are shown on the diagram. We could specify the prescription for the lens in the diagram by writing F 1 @α/f 2 @(α ±90 ). (1) toric lenses, page 3 W. F. Long, 1992

That is how keratometric findings are typically written, but lens powers are never written in this form. Recall that for a pure cylinder lens of power F C and axis α the prescription can be written as F C xα or F C @(α±90 ). We can think of the lens in the diagram as a superposition of two cylinder lenses and write (1) as F S xα /(F S +F C )x(α±90 ). (2) Equation (2) is the cross cylinder form. below: In diagram terms it sets up like 0.0 α+90 F2 α+90 F1 α + α F 1 x(90 ±α ) F 2 xα. Since you can add sphero-cylinder lenses meridian by meridian, as long as the principal meridians are the same, you can see that this form gives the correct prescription. Another, more common way of writing the prescription is in spherocylinder form in which the prescription is represented as a spherical lens of power F S superimposed on a cylinder lens with power and axis F C xα. This is written in the form F S / F C xα. (3) toric lenses, page 4 W. F. Long, 1992

In diagrams, equation (3) is represented as FS α+90 FS FC α+90 α + α F S F C xα The cylinder power can be positive or negative. The sign of the cylinder determines whether the prescription is in plus or minus cylinder form. Now the problem is how to relate the sphero-cylinder form (3) to the crossed cylinder form (2). The key to doing this is in the diagrams. Clearly, by equating powers in corresponding meridians, F 1 =F S+ F C and F 2 =F S. The cross cylinder form corresponding to the sphero-cylinder form is thus, (F S +F C )x(α±90 )/F S xα. (4) A given spectacle prescription can be written in any of these forms. The problem is converting among them. Here are three equivalent forms of a prescription. F S /F C xα (F S +F C )/(-F C )x(α±90 ) F S xα/(f S +F C )x(α±90 ). (5) If F C >0, these are, respectively, the plus cylinder, minus cylinder, and toric lenses, page 5 W. F. Long, 1992

cross cylinder forms. Note that α±90 is taken such that 180 α±90 >0. In cross cylinder form it is customary to write the meridian for the smaller angle first. Let's try it with a numerical example. the same prescription: Here are three equivalent forms of +3.00-1.00x030 +2.00+1.00x120 +2.00x030/+3.00x120 toric lenses, page 6 W. F. Long, 1992

Base Curves Base curve is a term which is used in a number of confusing ways. For an optometrist right now it may be considered to be a single power which specifies lens form, usually the front surface power of a lens. To add to the confusion, in communicating with labs about base curves, one generally refers to the lens clock reading on the front surface curve with a lens gauge calibrated for crown glass, regardless of the actual index of the material of the lens. A notation that takes into account lens form is as follows: (front surface formula)/(back surface formula). Customarily the surface formulas are given in cross-cylinder form, the power of the lowest magnitude coming first, for example, +4.00/-2.00x110 (+6.00x110/+8.00x020)/(-4.00). If the front surface is toric, the lens is said to be ground in plus cylinder form. If the back surface is toric, the lens is said to be ground in minus cylinder form. Usually base curves are chosen by the lens designer to minimize certain aberrations. The optometrist might want to specify base curves in three cases: To get a back surface curve deep enough to provide eyelash clearance. To get a particular magnification of the retinal image. To duplicate the performance of a lens to which the patient has become accustomed. toric lenses, page 7 W. F. Long, 1992

The Astigmatic Pencil Toric or spherocylinder lenses produce a characteristic astigmatic pencil of light when placed behind a point source. B focal lines blur circle The lens produce vertical and horizontal line foci separated by the Sturm's interval. The positions of the line foci may be calculated by applying the fundamental paraxial equation in each of the two principal meridians remembering that the vertical line focus is formed when rays in the horizontal plane come to a focus and the horizontal line focus is formed when rays in the vertical plane come to a focus. Dioptrically midway between the two line foci the astigmatic pencil assumes a circular crosssection, the so-called circle of least confusion. Example: Solution: Find the positions of the line foci and blur circle and the interval of Sturm for a toric lens with +5.00D in the horizontal meridian and +8.00D in the vertical meridian when imaging a point object one meter in front of the lens. The incoming vergence is L=1/(-1m)=-1.00D. The outgoing vergence in the horizontal meridian is +5.00D-1.00D=+4.00D. This corresponds to a distance of 1/(+4)=+25cm, where the vertical line focus is formed. In the vertical meridian, outgoing vergence is +8.00D-1.00D=+7.00D. This corresponds to a distance of 1/(+7.00)=+14.3cm, where the horizontal line focus is formed. The interval of Sturm is just 25cm-14.3cm=10.7cm. The vergence going to the blur circle is (+4+7)/2=+5.5D so the blur circle is 1/(+5.5D)=+18.2cm behind the lens. toric lenses, page 8 W. F. Long, 1992

Equivalent Sphere The spherical lens with a power equal to that of the average of the two principal meridians is the equivalent sphere. For a prescription S/Cxθ, the equivalent sphere is just S+C/2. From the discussion of the astigmatic pencil, it is clear that a spherical lens with the power of the equivalent sphere would focus light from a remove object in the plane of the circle of least confusion. Placed before the eye, and equivalent sphere lens would place the circle of least confusion at the retina. Power in Oblique Meridians of a Spherocylinder Lens The meridians of maximum and minimum power of a spherocylinder lens, the principal meridians, have spherical cross-sections. But what about oblique meridians? Such meridians do not have spherical cross-section and, hence, have no real optical power. But they do have an oblique power that is useful in certain contexts. If lens formula is S/Cxθ, then the power in a meridian at angle φ is F φ =S+Csin2(θ φ). toric lenses, page 9 W. F. Long, 1992

Prismatic Effects in Spherocylinder Lenses When a ray passes through an optical system its trajectory is bent, just as it would be with a prism. The amount of deviation of the ray increases the farther the ray is from the optic axis. We can look at these off-axial points as if they were prisms, the power of which varies with their position. As we have seen, the amount of prism at a point a distance c from the optical center of a spherical lens of power F is given by = -c/f'= -Fc. where F and c are given in diopters and meters, respectively, and is in prism diopters. This is known as Prentice's Rule. The minus sign indicates that the prism has its base toward the optic axis for a lens of positive power and away from the optic axis for a lens of negative power. The distance from the axis to the off-axial point and prism power can be treated as a vector quantities c and, in which case Prentice's Rule becomes =-Fc. Here is a vector running from the apex to the base of the prism. toric lenses, page 10 W. F. Long, 1992

For a cylinder lens, Prentice's rule only applies to the meridian in which there is power. The diagram below shows the power cross for a cylinder with axis 90. We wish to know the amount of prism at a point a distance c from the optic axis of the cylinder lens. 0.00 C C y C X C = C C X The power of the prism depends only on the x component of the vector c and its direction lies along the power meridian of the prism. Since any spherocylinder lens can be considered a combination of two cylinders at right angles, the principal above may be used to determine the prism at an arbitrary point on a spherocylinder lens. For a lens with formula S/Cxα, the prism at a point c is given by the following vector equation: =( x, y )=-(Hc x +Qc y,qc x +Vc y ), where H S+Csin2α, V S+Ccos2α, Q -Csinαcosα. Here H is the power of the lens in the horizontal meridian and V is the power of the lens in the vertical meridian. The quantity Q has no ready physical interpretation but is related to the obliquity of the cylinder. toric lenses, page 11 W. F. Long, 1992

Example: Solution: What prism is encountered at a point 5mm in and 15 mm up on a right lens of prescription -6.00-2.00x140? In this problem the vector c=(+0.5, +1.5) and H, V, and Q are H=-6-2sin2140 =-6.826D V=-6-2cos2140 =-7.174D Q=-(-2sin140 cos140 )=-0.985D. hence x =-Hc x -Qc y =6.826(0.5)+0.985(1.5)=+4.9p.d., y =-Qc x -Vc y =0.985(0.5)+7.174(1.5)=+11.3p.d. The final answer, then, is 5p.d. BI and 11p.d.BU. Example: Solution: What is the prism at a point 5mm out and 7mm down for the right lens of a patient with prescription +5.00-2.00x180. When the cylinder axis 180 or 90, Q=0 and =( x, y )=-(Hc x, Vc y ). In other words, Prentice's rule is just applied along the horizontal and vertical meridians. In this problem the power cross is +3.00 0.5cm +5.00 0.7cm so that x =-(-0.5cm)(+5.00)=+2.5p.d., BR or BI and y =-(-0.7cm)(+3.00)=+2.1p.d., BU. toric lenses, page 12 W. F. Long, 1992

In laying out a lens for edging, the optical center of the lens is moved so that the major reference point of the lens will sit in front of the patient's pupil. In decentering a lens a distance d, the prism achieved is that which is at a point c=-d from the optical center of the lens. The prism achieved by decentering a lens is then given by =( x, y )=(Hd x +Qd y, Qd x +Vd y ). A frequent problem is determining the decentration of a lens to obtain a given amount of prism. That can be obtained by inverting the equation above with the result d=(d x, d y )=(1/D)(V x -Q y, -Q x +H y ), where D S(S+C). Example: Solution: The Rx of a patient is -5.00/-2.00x025, O.S. Find the decentration to give a prism of 3p.d. BD and 4p.d. BO. For this lens H=-5-2sin225 =-5.357D V=-5-2cos225 =-6.643D Q=-(-2sin25 cos25 )=+0.766D D=(-5)(-7)=+35 The required prism is D=(+4, -3). Substituting in we get d x =[(-6.643)(+4)-(+0.766)(-3)]/35=-0.69cm=-6.9mm d y =[-(+0.766)(+4)+(-5.357)(-3)]/35=+0.37cm=+3.7mm or 7mm in (left) and 4mm up. toric lenses, page 13 W. F. Long, 1992

Obliquely Crossed Cylinders Suppose two spherocylinder lenses are alligned with their optical centers coincident and then the power of the combination is read with a lensometer. Surprisingly, the combination acts like a new spherocylinder lens with cylinder and sphere power somewhere between those of the component spherocylinders. Various algorithms have been given for finding the sphere, cylinder, and axis of the combination. Here is one version derived by Thompson. Suppose the two spherocylinder lenses have prescriptions S 1 /C 1 xα 1, and S 2 /C 2 xα 2 where α 2 >α 1. If both lens formulas are in the same form, the spherocylinder equivalent to the combination has the prescription S/Cxα where C=± [C 1 2+2C 1 C 2 cos2(α 2 -α 1 )+C 2 2] S=S 1 +S 2 +(C 1 +C 2 -C)/2 α=α 1 +tan-1{c 2 sin2(α 2 -α 1 )/[C 1 +C 2 cos2(α 2 -α 1 )]} 2 In the first of these equations the ± sign indicates that either the positive or the negative square root may be used, corresponding to plus or minus cylinder form. Example: Solution: What lens is equivalent to the combination (-1.00/-2.00x030)/(+4.00-3.00x050)? Using the equations above in minus cylinder form, C=- [(-2)2+2(-2)(-3)cos2(50-30 )+(-3)2]=-4.71D S=(-1)+(+4)+[(-2)+(-3)-(-4.71)]/2=+2.86D α=30 +tan-1[(-3)sin2(50-30 )/[(-2)+(-3)cos2(50-30 )] 2=42.08 So to the nearest 1/8 diopter, the combination is equivalent to +2.875/-4.75x042. toric lenses, page 14 W. F. Long, 1992

Some applications of obliquely crossed cylinders are Over-refraction The Humphrey refractor which gives S/C 1 x`180/c 2 x090 Javal's rule Evaluating differences in pre- and postsurgical refractions Evaluating accuracy of a refraction Evaluating degree of error in a fabrication Sagitta Formula and Spherocylinder Lenses Since the cross-sections in the two principal merdians of a spherocylinder lens are circular, we may apply the sagitta formula to these meridians. Recall, the sagitta formula is s= r- (r2-h 2) h2/2r. This can be used to find the thickness of lenses in the principal meridians. If the sine squared formula is used for curvature in oblique meridians, the sagitta formula can be used to give approximate thicknesses in oblique meridians. Example: Solution: A spectacle lens made of plastic of index 1.49 has Rx +3.00+5.00x090. If the lens blank is 60mm in diameter and has 2.0mm thickness at its thinnest edge, what is its thickness at its thickest edge? The radii of curvature of the two principal meridians are r 1 =(1.49-1)/(+3.00)=0.16333m=163.33mm r 2 =(1.49-1)/(+8.00)=0.06125m=61.25mm Since the half diameter for both meridians is 30mm, the sagittas in the two meridians are toric lenses, page 15 W. F. Long, 1992

s 1 =163.33- [(163.33mm)2-(30mm)2]=2.78mm s 2 =61.25- [(61.25mm)2-(30mm)2]=7.85mm Remember that the sagitta is the difference between center and edge thickness.? 2.0mm The diagram superimposes the two principal meridians. Clearly the thinnest edge thickness corresponds to the largest sagitta, 7.85mm. Thus the center thickness of the lens is 7.85mm+2.00mm=9.85mm. The thickness of the thickest edge is then 7.85mm-2.78mm=5.07mm. Why Do Toric Lenses Work? It is somewhat surprising that human astigmatism resolves itself into refractions which can be completely corrected by the relatively simple geometry of toric lens surfaces. Why is this so? It is so because all surfaces, including the cornea and other ocular surfaces are locally toric. And toric surfaces, even when separated and with oblique axes, produce combinations which may be neutralized by toric lenses. toric lenses, page 16 W. F. Long, 1992