Difference between revisions of "Double Gauss"

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Countless derivatives of this formula have been manufactured with variations including air-spacing rather than cementing the inner doublets; splitting the outer elements into two, and so on. Lenses in the f/1.0–f/1.4 class are frequently these modified double-Gauss designs.
 
Countless derivatives of this formula have been manufactured with variations including air-spacing rather than cementing the inner doublets; splitting the outer elements into two, and so on. Lenses in the f/1.0–f/1.4 class are frequently these modified double-Gauss designs.
 
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|image_source= https://www.flickr.com/photos/vox/52496545172/in/pool-camerawiki/
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|image= https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/52496545172_7edfd06cc6_w.jpg
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|image_text= This 7-element derivative achieves f/1.4<br>([[Olympus OM system]] Zuiko 50mm)
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|image_by= Voxphoto
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[[Category:Glossary]]
 
[[Category:Glossary]]

Revision as of 17:31, 13 November 2022

The cornerstone of "normal" lens designs in the f/1.7-f/2.0 class, the double Gauss formula originates with the Zeiss Planar of 1896. The classical version has six elements in a 1-2-2-1 configuration, symmetrical around the aperture stop.

Photographers may simply refer to a "Gauss" design lens. Strictly this is not correct, as Carl Friedrich Gauss had originally described a telescopic objective pairing a positive and a negative element. Using two Gaussian lenses back-to-back was the vital innovation for photography.

Countless derivatives of this formula have been manufactured with variations including air-spacing rather than cementing the inner doublets; splitting the outer elements into two, and so on. Lenses in the f/1.0–f/1.4 class are frequently these modified double-Gauss designs.