Science Lab > What Is Light? > Lenses

Because of the way in which lenses refract light that strikes them, they are used to concentrate or disperse light. Light entering a lens can be altered in many different ways according, for example, to the composition, size, thickness, curvature and combination of the lens used. Many different kinds of lenses are manufactured for use in such devices as cameras, telescopes, microscopes and eyeglasses. Copying machines, image scanners, optical fiber transponders and cutting-edge semiconductor production equipment are other more recent devices in which the ability of lenses to diffuse or condense light is put to use.
- Convex and Concave Lenses Used in Eyeglasses
- Concave Lenses Are for the Nearsighted, Convex for the Farsighted
- Telephoto Lenses Are Combinations of Convex and Concave Lenses
- Lenses that Correct the Blurring of Colors
- Low-chromatic-aberration Glass
- Aspherical Lenses for Correcting Spherical Aberration
- Lenses that Make Use of the Diffraction of Light
- Single Lens Reflex (SLR) Camera Lenses that Use Laminated Diffractive Optical Elements
- A Huge Lens: the Subaru Telescope on the Summit of Mt.Mauna Kea in Hawaii
- Subaru's Primary Focus Camera Boasts Very Wide Field of View

