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what lens is used for farsidedness and which is used for nearsidedness?

2006-10-16 10:19:33 · 3 answers · asked by patajz 2 in Health Other - Health

I need to know if its a concave or convex lens

2006-10-16 10:22:56 · update #1

3 answers

The Anatomy of a Lens
If a piece of glass or other transparent material takes on the appropriate shape, it will be capable of taking parallel rays of incident light and either converging them to a point or appear to diverge them from a point. Such a piece of glass is referred to as a lens.


A lens is merely a carefully ground or molded piece of transparent material which refracts light rays in such as way as to form an image. Lenses can be thought of as a series of tiny refracting lenses, each of which refracts light to produce their own image. When these prisms act together, they produce a bright enough image focused at a point.

There are a variety of types of lenses. Lenses differ from one another in terms of their shape and the materials from which they are made. Our focus will be upon lenses which are symmetrical across their horizontal axis - known as the principal axis. In this unit, we will categorize lenses as converging lenses and diverging lenses. A converging lens is a lens which converges rays of light which are traveling parallel to its principal axis. Converging lenses can be identified by their shape; they are thicker across their middle and thinner at their upper and lower edges. A diverging lens is a lens which diverges rays of light which are traveling parallel to its principal axis. Diverging lenses can also be identified by their shape; they are thinner across their middle and thicker at their upper and lower edges.


A double convex lens is symmetrical across both its horizontal and vertical axis. Each of the lens' two faces can be thought of as originally being part of a sphere. The fact that a double convex lens is thicker across its middle is an indicator that it will converge rays of light which travel parallel to its principal axis. A double convex lens is a converging lens. A double concave lens is also symmetrical across both its horizontal and vertical axis. The two faces of a double concave lens can be thought of as originally being part of a sphere. The fact that a double concave lens is thinner across its middle is an indicator that it will diverge rays of light which travel parallel to its principal axis. A double concave lens is a diverging lens. These two types of lenses - a double convex and a double concave lens will be the only types of lenses which will be discussed at The Physics Classroom.




As we begin to discuss the refraction of light rays and the formation of images by these two types of lenses, we will need to use a variety of terms. Many of these terms should be familiar to you because they have already been discussed during Unit 13. If you are uncertain of the meaning of the terms, should spend some time reviewing them so that their meaning is firmly internalized in your mind. They will be essential as we proceed through Lesson 5. These terms describe the various parts of a lens and include such words as

Principal axis Vertical Plane
Focal Point Focal Length


If a symmetrical lens is thought of as being a slice of a sphere, then there would be a line passing through the center of the sphere and attaching to the mirror in the exact center of the lens. This imaginary line is known as the principal axis. A lens also has an imaginary vertical axis which bisects the symmetrical lens in two. As mentioned above, light rays incident towards either face of the lens and traveling parallel to the principal axis will either converge or diverge. If the light rays converge (as in a converging lens), then they will converge to a point. This point is known as the focal point of the converging lens. If the light rays diverge(as in a diverging lens), then the diverging rays can be traced backwards until they intersect at a point. This point is known as the focal point of a diverging lens. The focal point is denoted by the letter F on the diagrams below. Note that each lens has two focal points - one on each side of the lens. Unlike mirrors, lenses can allow light to pass through either face, depending on where the incident rays are coming from. Subsequently, every lens has two possible focal points. The distance from the mirror to the focal point is known as the focal length (abbreviated by "f"). Technically, a lens does not have a center of curvature (at least not one which has any importance to our discussion). However a lens does have an imaginary point which we refer to as the 2F point. This is the point on the principal axis which is twice as far from the vertical axis as the focal point is.

2006-10-16 10:22:55 · answer #1 · answered by Cassie T 2 · 0 0

Nearsighted - concave or curving inwards.
Farsighted - convex or curving outwards.

2006-10-16 17:29:44 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

negatives are used for nearsidedness and postives are used for farsidedness.

2006-10-16 17:21:11 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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