Publication | Closed Access
Cartesian oval representation of freeform optics in illumination systems
132
Citations
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References
2011
Year
Geometric ModelingHamiltonian TheoryEngineeringGeometryOphthalmologyOptical PropertiesNatural SciencesDiffractive OpticOptic DesignPrimitive Surface ElementsGeometrical OpticCartesian Oval RepresentationFreeform OpticGeometrical AberrationOptical SystemsComputational GeometryFreeform DesignsGeometrical Optics
The geometrical method for constructing optical surfaces for illumination purpose developed by Oliker and co-workers [Trends in Nonlinear Analysis (Springer, 2003)] is generalized in order to obtain freeform designs in arbitrary optical systems. The freeform is created by a set of primitive surface elements, which are generalized Cartesian ovals adapted to the given optical system. Those primitives are determined by Hamiltonian theory of ray optics. The potential of this approach is demonstrated by some examples, e.g., freeform lenses with collimating front elements.
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