Expand this Topic clickable element to expand a topic
Skip to content
Optica Publishing Group

Optimization of two-glass monocentric lenses for compact panoramic imagers: general aberration analysis and specific designs: erratum

Open Access Open Access

Abstract

In a previous publication [Appl. Opt. 51, 7648 (2012)], two errors appeared in Fig. 14 and one error in text. These errors are corrected here.

© 2013 Optical Society of America

During submission process, the final version of Fig. 14 of [1] was inadvertently replaced by an older draft version with elements drawn on a different scale. The corrected figure is shown here.

 figure: Fig. 14.

Fig. 14. Comparison of two conventional wide-field lenses with a monocentric-waveguide lens. All have a 12 mm focal length, 120° field of view, and similar light collection, but the monocentric lens provides higher resolution in a compact volume. [CORRECTED]

Download Full Size | PDF

Also, on the page 7653, right column, second paragraph, the text listing the glass catalogs used should state “… Schott, Ohara, Sumita and Hoya…”.

These errors have no bearing on the result shown in the rest of the paper.

References

1. Igor Stamenov, Ilya P. Agurok, and Joseph E. Ford, “Optimization of two-glass monocentric lenses for compact panoramic imagers: general aberration analysis and specific designs,” Appl. Opt. 51, 7648–7661 (2012).

Cited By

Optica participates in Crossref's Cited-By Linking service. Citing articles from Optica Publishing Group journals and other participating publishers are listed here.

Alert me when this article is cited.


Figures (1)

Fig. 14.
Fig. 14. Comparison of two conventional wide-field lenses with a monocentric-waveguide lens. All have a 12 mm focal length, 120° field of view, and similar light collection, but the monocentric lens provides higher resolution in a compact volume. [CORRECTED]
Select as filters


Select Topics Cancel
© Copyright 2024 | Optica Publishing Group. All rights reserved, including rights for text and data mining and training of artificial technologies or similar technologies.