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by denton-scratch
922 days ago
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Therre's a diagram in TFA, comparing the construction of a conventional lens with a metalens. The diagram shows two labelled parts that I didn't understand: a) Glass plate with bandpass filter b) Near-infrared contact image sensor The legend doesn't say, but I suspect the diagrams show a distance sensor, not a camera. So I assume the infrared lasers have been omitted from the diagram. Also, I'd quite like to know a bit more about the optical bandpass filter. I suppose any "transparent" material is effectively a bandpass filter; this one presumably passes near-infrared, so is it like the dark-red plastic filter on a TV remote? Why's the sensor called a "contact" image sensor? |
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Contact image sensors are image sensors designed to be slapped right up against something. They're used in scanners and surface inspection sensors. No clue how this relates to meta-lenses.
I suspect it's just a bad diagram. Their barrel design is impossible to manufacture.
Source: Optical engineer.
https://www.thorlabs.com/newgrouppage9.cfm?objectgroup_id=10...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contact_image_sensor